
Advanced Melbourne Concrete is a Brevard County concrete contractor serving Cocoa, FL with floor installations, driveways, pool decks, and slab foundations. We have worked throughout Brevard County since 2019, and our crew understands the coastal soil, humidity, and permit requirements specific to Cocoa.

Cocoa homeowners adding garage workshops, Florida rooms, or utility additions need floors poured on properly compacted coastal sand - skip that step and the slab will crack within a season. We prep the base, tie in the reinforcement, and pour a floor built to last in this environment. See our full concrete floor installation service for details.
Most driveways in Cocoa were poured during the Space Age boom years - the 1950s through the 1980s - and are decades past their expected lifespan. Salt air and humidity accelerate surface scaling on older slabs. We remove the existing concrete, compact the sandy sub-base correctly, and replace it with a new driveway that handles Florida's wet-dry cycle.
Many Cocoa homes have in-ground pools installed during the same era as the home itself, and the surrounding concrete deck has been absorbing UV and salt air for decades. We resurface or replace pool decks with slip-resistant finishes designed to hold up in Brevard County's coastal climate.
Additions and detached structures in Cocoa require slab foundations engineered for flat coastal terrain where the water table can be surprisingly close to the surface after heavy rain. We coordinate with engineers when required and pull City of Cocoa permits before any excavation begins.
Low-lying Cocoa yards near the Indian River and in older neighborhoods see significant soil movement when summer storm water saturates and then dries out the sandy ground. Concrete retaining walls hold grade changes in place and stop soil from washing across driveways and walkways with every downpour.
Cocoa homeowners use outdoor living space year-round, and a properly sloped concrete patio drains rainwater away from the house rather than letting it pool against the foundation or under a screen enclosure. We grade every patio correctly so water moves where it should.
Cocoa sits on the western shore of the Indian River Lagoon, which means every home in the city deals with above-average humidity, salt air, and moisture levels year-round. That environment is harder on concrete than most homeowners realize. The same salt air that fades paint and corrodes metal also penetrates concrete over time, causing surface scaling and making cracks worse faster than they would develop in a drier climate. Add the fact that most homes here were built between the 1950s and the 1980s - many of them concrete block ranch houses poured on sandy, flat ground - and you have a city full of concrete work that has been dealing with Florida's weather longer than most homeowners have lived here.
Florida's summer storm season hits Cocoa hard. Heavy afternoon thunderstorms roll through almost daily from June through September, and the flat terrain means water can pool against foundations and around slabs if drainage was not built correctly from the start. Parts of Cocoa sit in FEMA-designated flood zones near the lagoon, and homeowners in those areas should be especially careful about how concrete is graded around their homes. Concrete poured without proper base compaction and slope will fail faster here than it would in a well-drained suburb - and fixing it costs far more than doing it right the first time.
Our crew works throughout Cocoa regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. Cocoa is a mix of old and new - from the brick-street blocks of Cocoa Village, where some of the oldest homes in Brevard County sit on the Indian River waterfront, to the concrete block ranch neighborhoods built for the engineers and contractors who came during the space program's boom years. The properties we work on in this city run the full range from pre-war bungalows to 1970s split-levels, and each has its own soil conditions, drainage challenges, and permitting history.
State Road 520 runs through the center of Cocoa and connects the city to Merritt Island and Cocoa Beach to the east. US-1 runs north-south along the Indian River. If your home is in one of the older neighborhoods between US-1 and the river, you are likely dealing with mature tree roots, aging infrastructure, and concrete that has been absorbing Florida weather for 50 years or more. The City of Cocoa Building Division handles permits for concrete work within city limits, and we pull those permits before any project begins.
We also serve homeowners just across the water in Merritt Island and north in Rockledge, where similar soil conditions and coastal influences apply. Projects that cross municipal lines are not a problem for us.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and describe your project. We respond within one business day and schedule a site visit at a time that works for you.
We visit your property, check soil conditions, drainage slope, and access, and walk through what the project involves. You receive a written estimate before any commitment is required - no pressure.
For work requiring a City of Cocoa building permit, we handle the application and wait for approval before scheduling the pour. Once approved, we confirm your start date and timeline.
Our crew completes the pour and surface finish and removes all debris from your property. Before we leave, we walk you through what the concrete needs during the 28-day curing period.
We serve Cocoa homeowners from Cocoa Village to the neighborhoods along US-1. Free estimates, permits handled, no surprises on price.
(321) 326-1433Cocoa is a city of about 19,000 people on the western bank of the Indian River Lagoon in Brevard County. The city has one of the oldest settlement histories in the county, and its downtown core - Cocoa Village - preserves brick streets and commercial buildings dating back to the early 1900s. The Village sits along the riverfront and is home to locally owned shops and restaurants that draw visitors from across the Space Coast. Outside the historic district, the residential fabric of the city is primarily mid-century concrete block ranch homes built during the 1950s through the 1980s, when Kennedy Space Center brought thousands of workers and their families to Brevard County. Most lots are modest in size - a quarter acre or less - with mature oak and palm trees that add character but also push roots under driveways and sidewalks over the decades.
About 55% of Cocoa homes are owner-occupied, and many residents have lived in the same house for years. The homeownership culture here is practical - people take care of their properties and want contractors who will do the same. Neighboring Titusville to the north and Rockledge to the south share Cocoa's Space Age housing stock and coastal soil conditions - homeowners in all three cities deal with similar concrete challenges.
Get a durable, professionally poured concrete driveway built to last.
Learn MoreEnjoy a beautiful, low-maintenance concrete patio for your outdoor space.
Learn MoreAdd decorative texture and patterns to your concrete with stamped finishes.
Learn MoreSafe, level concrete sidewalks installed for homes and businesses.
Learn MoreEnhance any surface with custom colors, textures, and decorative finishes.
Learn MoreStructurally sound retaining walls that hold soil and improve your yard.
Learn MorePrecision concrete floor installation for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreSlip-resistant, attractive concrete pool decks designed for Florida heat.
Learn MoreSolid, code-compliant concrete steps built for safety and curb appeal.
Learn MoreComplete foundation installation services for new construction projects.
Learn MoreDurable concrete parking lots designed for heavy traffic and longevity.
Learn MoreRestore settling foundations to their correct level safely and efficiently.
Learn MoreCall us today or submit your project details and we will get back to you within one business day - no obligation, no surprises.