
Supreme Cocoa Concrete serves Palm Bay homeowners with foundation installation, driveways, patios, and concrete flatwork across all parts of this large Brevard County city - permits handled and same-week responses on every inquiry.

Palm Bay's large lots and continued growth in the southwest and northwest sections of the city mean new construction and home additions are common here - and every one of them needs a properly poured foundation slab. We build foundations to current Florida Building Code standards, with base preparation suited to the sandy terrain that is typical throughout this part of Brevard County. For full details, see our foundation installation service.
Most homes in Palm Bay were built between the 1970s and the early 2000s, and a large share of those original driveways have reached the end of their useful life. Sandy soil that was not properly compacted during the original build leads to cracking and sinking that gets worse with every rainy season. We pour new driveways with the base preparation and grading that Palm Bay's terrain requires, so water drains away from your garage and foundation rather than pooling at the edge of the slab.
Palm Bay's warm, mostly dry winters make a back patio usable for a large part of the year, and a concrete slab holds up to Florida's heat and UV exposure far longer than wood decking or paver surfaces that shift in sandy soil. We pour patios sized and sloped to handle the afternoon thunderstorms that are a near-daily occurrence throughout the summer months in Brevard County.
Palm Bay has a significant amount of still-developing land in its outer sections, and homeowners adding garages, workshops, or in-law suites need slab foundations built to current code. Sandy, flat ground that does not drain well in low areas creates real challenges for a slab that is supposed to stay level for decades - we take base preparation seriously so the pour holds up through Florida's wet and dry cycles.
Large quarter-acre and bigger lots throughout Palm Bay often have uneven areas where erosion is an ongoing problem, particularly in neighborhoods with older original grading. A concrete retaining wall stops soil movement at its source and creates usable flat space in a yard that would otherwise keep washing out during summer storm season. We build walls sized and reinforced for the soil loads and drainage conditions typical in this part of Brevard County.
Palm Bay has a growing number of small commercial properties, churches, and community facilities spread across the city's large footprint - and many of them sit on asphalt parking lots that are wearing out faster than expected in Florida's heat. Concrete parking lots last significantly longer in this climate with lower long-term maintenance costs. We pour commercial-grade parking surfaces and handle all required Brevard County permits from start to finish.
Palm Bay is one of the largest cities in Florida by land area, covering nearly 70 square miles. A huge share of that land was platted and sold as residential lots through the 1970s and 1980s by a large planned community developer, and the homes built on those lots during that era - mostly single-story concrete block ranch houses - are now 30 to 50 years old. That means driveways, sidewalks, and patios poured during the original build are reaching the end of their useful life all at once. Many of them were built on sandy ground that was not adequately compacted, and the effects of that original shortcut show up decades later as cracking, sinking, and surface failure that can no longer be patched over.
Palm Bay's location on Florida's Space Coast puts it in the path of Atlantic hurricanes every season, and even storms that do not make direct landfall nearby can bring enough wind and rain to damage concrete surfaces, crack unanchored slabs, and push water into places it should not be. The sandy, flat terrain of the city drains unevenly - some areas move water well while others develop standing water after heavy rain - and a concrete contractor who does not grade properly for site-specific drainage conditions is setting you up for problems every summer. The city's growth has also brought a new wave of construction in the newer southwest and northwest sections, where homeowners expect a higher standard of workmanship than what was typical during the original 1970s and 1980s building boom.
Our crew works throughout Palm Bay regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. We pull every permit through Brevard County Building Services and know how to keep a project moving through the inspection process without unnecessary delays. Palm Bay is a large city, and the nature of the work we see varies a lot depending on which part of town you are in - the older central and eastern neighborhoods tend to have more cracked and sunken concrete on aging lots, while the newer subdivisions going up in the southwest are asking for new construction slabs and larger flatwork projects on larger lots.
The city covers a lot of ground, and not every contractor who says they serve Palm Bay actually makes it out to the outer sections of the city. We work all of it - from the neighborhoods near Turkey Creek Sanctuary in the northeast part of the city to the newer builds going up near Palm Bay Road in the southwest. We also regularly serve homeowners in nearby Melbourne just to the north, and we understand how conditions differ across this part of Brevard County. If you are in Palm Bay and not sure where to start, call us - we will come out, look at the site, and give you a straight answer about what needs to be done and what it will cost.
We reply within one business day. We ask a few questions upfront - project type, rough size, and whether the current surface is concrete, asphalt, or bare ground. No charge and no commitment for this initial conversation.
We visit the site to assess drainage, soil conditions, existing concrete, and access before quoting a price. This is also where we talk through the Brevard County permit requirements for your specific job and give you a written, itemized estimate.
We file the permit application with Brevard County on your behalf. Approval usually takes one to two weeks. We confirm your start date once the permit is in hand and let you know what to prepare before the crew arrives.
The pour itself is typically finished in one day for residential projects. New concrete needs a minimum of seven days before vehicle traffic. We schedule the county inspection and close out the permit so your project has a clean record.
We cover all of Palm Bay - from the older neighborhoods near the city center to the newer builds out in the southwest. Call or submit the form and we will respond within one business day.
(321) 386-0373Palm Bay is one of the largest cities in Florida by land area, covering roughly 68 square miles in the southern portion of Brevard County. The city has about 120,000 residents and is largely suburban - single-family homes on generous lots spread across a wide, mostly flat landscape that was originally platted for residential development decades ago. Much of the city was sold lot by lot to buyers across the country starting in the 1970s, and the homes that went up on those lots during the following decades form the core of what Palm Bay looks like today: concrete block ranch houses with attached garages, broad driveways, and large yards. In more recent years, newer subdivisions have grown in the southwest and northwest sections of the city, bringing larger and more updated homes into a market that had been defined by that earlier building era. Palm Bay, Florida is part of the Space Coast region, and residents regularly see rocket launches from Kennedy Space Center to the north.
The city has a strong parks system, and Turkey Creek Sanctuary - a nature preserve in the northeast section of Palm Bay with trails along Turkey Creek - is one of the most visited local spots for residents. Palm Bay Regional Park serves as a central gathering place for sports, recreation, and community events. The city sits just south of Melbourne along US-1 and Interstate 95, and many residents commute north into Melbourne or to Patrick Space Force Base for work. For homeowners here, the mix of aging 1970s-1980s homes and newer construction creates a wide range of concrete needs - from replacing an original driveway that has finally cracked past the point of patching to pouring a new slab for an addition on a newer property. We work across all of it, and we also serve homeowners in nearby West Melbourne and surrounding communities.
Get a durable, professionally poured concrete driveway built to last.
Learn MoreStructural retaining walls built to hold soil and prevent erosion.
Learn MoreLevel, sealed interior floors for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreSafe, properly graded concrete steps for entrances and landscapes.
Learn MoreHeavy-duty concrete parking lots designed for long-term performance.
Learn MoreWe cover every corner of Palm Bay from the older city-center neighborhoods to the newest subdivisions in the southwest. Reach out now and we will respond within one business day.