
Supreme Cocoa Concrete handles pool decks, driveways, patios, and foundations for Satellite Beach homeowners - with salt-air-rated methods, permits pulled through Brevard County, and replies within one business day.

Almost every home in Satellite Beach has a pool, and the decks around them take a beating from salt air, daily UV exposure, and constant wet feet traffic. We pour non-slip, sealed pool deck surfaces designed to hold up on the barrier island and stay comfortable underfoot in the Florida heat. Learn more about our concrete pool decks service.
Most homes in Satellite Beach were built in the 1960s and 1970s, and many original driveways are past their lifespan. We replace cracked, sunken driveways with properly graded concrete that sheds rainwater away from the garage - a critical detail on tight barrier island lots where water has nowhere obvious to go.
Satellite Beach's year-round mild temperatures make outdoor patios one of the most used features of any home here. We pour patios with the correct slope and sealed finish for coastal conditions, so the surface stays clean, safe, and presentable through years of Florida sun and salt air.
Stamped concrete is a practical choice for Satellite Beach homeowners who want a decorative finish around pools, patios, or driveways without the maintenance issues that come with pavers on a salt-air barrier island. We apply patterns and coloring that hold up under coastal UV and moisture conditions.
The small lots and mature landscaping common in Satellite Beach neighborhoods often mean tree roots have worked their way under sidewalk slabs over several decades. We remove lifted sections, cut back encroaching roots where needed, and pour new sidewalks to current Brevard County code with control joints in the right places.
Entry steps on Satellite Beach homes see constant salt air exposure and frequent rainfall, which means staining, surface erosion, and rebar corrosion happen faster here than inland. We rebuild steps with the right mix design and finish to extend their service life in the coastal environment.
Satellite Beach covers just over two square miles on a narrow barrier island between the Atlantic Ocean and the Indian River Lagoon. Every property in the city - regardless of which street it sits on - is exposed to salt air from both directions year-round. Salt does real damage to concrete over time: it accelerates corrosion of the steel reinforcing inside slabs, breaks down surface sealers faster than in inland areas, and causes pitting and surface scaling that makes driveways, pool decks, and patios look old before their time. A contractor who uses the same mix design and finishing methods for Satellite Beach that they use for an inland Brevard County suburb will leave you with a surface that deteriorates on an accelerated schedule.
The housing stock here is also a specific challenge. Most homes were built during the Space Race era - the 1960s and 1970s - as a bedroom community for workers at Kennedy Space Center. That means most concrete driveways, sidewalks, and pool decks are 45 to 60 years old and were poured thinner and with less reinforcement than current standards require. When these surfaces fail, they usually need full replacement rather than resurfacing, because the base beneath them has also degraded over decades. Florida's summer rain season - which drops heavy rainfall almost daily from June through September - adds further stress by repeatedly soaking and drying out surfaces that are already past their design life.
Our crew works throughout Satellite Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. The single-story concrete block ranch homes that line most streets in this city - built fast during the Space Coast boom - have specific characteristics that affect every concrete project we do near them: tight side-yard clearances, mature landscaping close to driveways, and original slabs that were poured thin over sandy barrier island soil. We account for all of that before we ever start a pour.
Satellite Beach's street grid is compact and the city is entirely built out, which means equipment access can be tighter here than in newer suburban areas. We know how to work within those constraints. The permit process runs through Brevard County Building Services, and we handle that paperwork on behalf of every homeowner we work with - no delays because the permit was skipped or filled out incorrectly. Whether your home is near Satellite Beach Oceanfront Park or a few blocks back toward the Indian River Lagoon, we serve the entire city.
We regularly work in nearby Indian Harbour Beach as well, and we know the conditions shared by these two barrier island communities. If you are in Satellite Beach and ready to start a concrete project, call us for a same-week estimate.
We reply within one business day. We will ask a few basic questions about your project - what surface needs work, roughly how large it is, and whether there is existing concrete to remove. No obligation, no sales pressure.
We visit your Satellite Beach property to look at the existing surface, soil conditions, drainage, and access before quoting a price. This is also where we explain which Brevard County permits apply and give you a written estimate with all costs broken out.
We file the permit application with Brevard County Building Services and handle follow-up. Once the permit clears - typically one to two weeks - we schedule the crew and confirm what you need to prepare before they arrive.
Most Satellite Beach projects are completed in one to two days of active work. After the pour we walk you through the curing schedule, including how long to keep vehicles and foot traffic off the new surface, and what to expect in the first few weeks.
We serve all of Satellite Beach, FL - call us or submit a request and we will reply within one business day with a free estimate.
(321) 386-0373Satellite Beach is a small residential city on a barrier island in Brevard County, Florida, covering just over two square miles between the Atlantic Ocean and the Indian River Lagoon. The city grew primarily during the 1960s and 1970s as a bedroom community for workers at Kennedy Space Center, which sits about 20 miles to the north. That origin story explains a lot about Satellite Beach today: the housing stock is almost entirely single-story concrete block construction from the Space Race era, the homeownership rate is high, and residents tend to stay for the long term. The city is completely built out with no room to expand - almost every square foot of the island is already a home, a park, or a road.
Most streets run east to west between the ocean and the lagoon, and the city has a quiet, established neighborhood character. Satellite Beach Oceanfront Park sits right on the Atlantic and is the main gathering spot for residents. The Indian River Lagoon forms the western boundary of the city and is visible from many streets and backyards. Nearby Melbourne to the south provides most of the regional retail and services, while Cocoa and Merritt Island sit to the north across the Pineda Causeway. The community skews toward long-term owner-occupied households, many of them professionals connected to the aerospace and defense industry that defines this stretch of Florida's coast.
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 MoreSalt air and aging Space Race-era homes demand a contractor who knows what they are dealing with - call us today for a free on-site estimate.