Commercial General ContractorOrlando, FLEst. the 1980sFL License: pending verificationBonding: pending verificationInsurance: pending verification

Concrete

Concrete is where property liability lives: sidewalks, ramps, pads, and curbs. Landmark pours and repairs them with its own crews.

Self-performed trade

Trip hazards, spalling, and failed pads are the small line items that turn into claims. Landmark handles flatwork, sidewalks, dumpster pads, curbing, and structural repairs as self-performed scope, sequenced so a working property keeps working.

On build-outs and site work, in-house concrete means slab cuts, infills, and exterior work stay on the project schedule instead of a sub's.

Scope includes

Sidewalk repair and replacement
Flatwork, slabs, and slab cuts and infills
Dumpster pads and equipment pads
Curbing and ADA ramps
Structural concrete repair

Frequently asked questions

Repair or replace: how do you decide on damaged concrete?

By what failed and why. Surface spalling can often be repaired; failed base, major cracking, or trip-hazard displacement usually mean replacement is the cheaper long-term call. The estimate lays out both paths.

How disruptive is concrete work at an operating property?

Work is phased and barricaded by section, and cure times are scheduled so entrances, drive lanes, and dumpster access rotate rather than close.

Do you handle the small stuff, like one bad sidewalk panel?

Yes, through the maintenance track. Small concrete repairs are exactly the calls that portfolio managers need answered quickly.

Why does self-performed concrete matter?

Concrete drives schedule on site work and build-outs alike. In-house crews mean pours happen when the schedule says, and workmanship has one accountable name on it.

One call. Full scope.

Hard-number estimate and schedule commitment before contract.

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