
True Line Edgewater Concrete provides concrete patio construction, driveways, pool decks, and foundations in New Smyrna Beach. We have been working in this area since 2019 and know what coastal soil, salt air, and Florida's rainy season do to concrete that is not installed correctly.

New Smyrna Beach's warm climate means outdoor living space is usable for most of the year - but patios here need to handle direct salt air, heavy summer rain, and intense UV without showing their age in a few seasons. Our concrete patio construction includes proper sub-base prep, slope for drainage, and finish options that work in coastal Florida conditions rather than fighting them.
Sandy soil throughout New Smyrna Beach - on both the beachside and the mainland - makes driveway base preparation the most critical part of the job. Driveways that crack and sink here almost always trace back to inadequate compaction, not the concrete itself. We prepare the sub-base before every pour and install control joints to manage Florida's thermal expansion cycles.
Pools in New Smyrna Beach get heavy use from spring through fall, and the deck surface takes a beating from bare feet, pool chemicals, and constant wet-dry cycles in the heat. A properly poured and finished pool deck - with the right surface texture and sealer - stays safe underfoot and resists the staining and surface breakdown that beachside humidity accelerates.
New Smyrna Beach sits on low-lying coastal ground with a high water table in many neighborhoods, which means foundations here need to be set at the right elevation above grade and built with adequate moisture protection. We handle foundation pours for both new structures and additions, meeting current Florida Building Code requirements for this coastal flood zone.
Homes near the Canal Street historic district and along the beachside often have a style that plain gray concrete does not complement. Decorative and stamped concrete finishes let you get the look of stone, brick, or tile with the durability of a properly poured concrete slab - and without the maintenance headaches of actual pavers shifting on sandy soil.
Low-lying areas in New Smyrna Beach - especially near the Intracoastal Waterway - often have yard flooding and grade erosion problems that worsen with every summer rain cycle. A well-built concrete retaining wall stops soil from moving, improves drainage control, and can be designed to handle the hydraulic pressure that builds up in wet coastal soil.
New Smyrna Beach is split between two very different environments: the barrier island beachside, which faces constant Atlantic salt air and direct sun, and the mainland side, which sits on low-lying ground with sandy soil and a water table that rises quickly after heavy rain. Concrete work on the beachside needs corrosion-resistant reinforcement and sealer that can handle salt air - the same spec you would use for an interior mainland slab is not enough out there. On the mainland, drainage and sub-base work become the priority, because saturated sandy soil shifts faster than homeowners expect.
A large portion of the city's housing stock was built in the 1950s through the 1980s, which means a lot of driveways, patios, and steps from that era are hitting the point where patching is no longer enough - they need replacing. Rising home values in recent years have made that investment more worthwhile, and more homeowners are investing in upgrades that protect and improve what they own. The City of New Smyrna Beach Building Division requires permits for most concrete flatwork, and we handle that process as part of every project.
Our crew works throughout New Smyrna Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. We pull permits from the City of New Smyrna Beach Building Division and have worked on both the beachside island and the mainland neighborhoods west of the Intracoastal.
New Smyrna Beach has a distinct character compared to other Volusia County cities. The Canal Street historic district on the mainland draws homeowners who want concrete work that fits the older aesthetic of the neighborhood - that often means stamped or textured finishes rather than plain gray. The homes near Canaveral National Seashore on the southern edge of the city are on some of the more exposed, salt-air-heavy lots we work on - and the spec for those jobs reflects that environment. The older cottages on the beachside are a different kind of challenge: small footprints, mixed-era materials, and sometimes decades of deferred maintenance all in one job.
We serve the whole region around New Smyrna Beach, including neighboring communities. If you are looking for concrete work closer to Oak Hill to the north, we cover that area as well and understand the more rural property types you find there.
Call or submit a request and we will respond within one business day. You do not need a detailed plan - just tell us what you need done and where the property is located.
We visit the property, look at existing conditions - including soil type, drainage, and any access issues on beachside lots - and give you a written estimate. This is also where we identify permit requirements so there are no surprises.
We handle the City of New Smyrna Beach permit process on your behalf and schedule the work around your availability. We plan around afternoon thunderstorms in the summer months to keep the project on track.
We complete the work according to the agreed scope, clean up the site, and walk you through curing timelines and care instructions. You will know exactly when the surface is ready for vehicles, foot traffic, or furniture.
We serve New Smyrna Beach on both the beachside and mainland. Call or submit a request and we will respond within one business day with a written estimate and no sales pressure.
(386) 749-1231New Smyrna Beach is a coastal city of about 28,000 residents in Volusia County, known for its consistent surf, walkable Canal Street historic downtown, and one of the most recognized small art scenes in Florida. The city has two main areas: the barrier island beachside to the east of the Intracoastal Waterway, with tightly spaced older homes and direct Atlantic exposure, and the more spread-out mainland side to the west, where newer subdivisions mix with longer-established neighborhoods. Home values have risen significantly in recent years, drawing buyers from larger Florida cities and pushing owners to invest more in property upkeep and improvements.
Much of the city's housing stock dates to the 1950s through the 1980s - concrete block construction is the norm, but older beachside cottages and wood-frame homes are common as well. The proximity to Canaveral National Seashore along the southern edge of the city contributes to the outdoor, waterfront character that defines the community. To the north sits Oak Hill, a smaller community with a quieter, more rural feel that we also serve regularly.
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Learn MoreCall True Line Edgewater Concrete today or submit an online request. We respond within one business day and provide free, written estimates for every project in New Smyrna Beach.