Painting
Commercial painting scheduled around the way your property actually operates.
Interior repaints happen after hours and between tenants; exterior work gets planned around weather windows and storefront access. Surfaces get prepped properly, because in Florida sun and rain, preparation is the difference between a five-year finish and a two-year do-over.
Painting often rides along with other Landmark scope, a build-out, a stucco recoat, an ADA upgrade, which means one mobilization instead of two vendors on site.
Scope includes
| Interior repaints scheduled around tenant hours |
| Exterior painting with full surface preparation |
| Pressure washing, patching, and sealing before coating |
| Color and finish coordination with ownership standards |
| Combined scope with stucco, drywall, and build-out work |
Frequently asked questions
Can you paint while my building is occupied?
Yes. Interior work is scheduled around tenant hours and contained; exterior work is phased so entrances stay open.
What prep work comes before exterior painting?
Pressure washing, patching stucco or substrate damage, and sealing. Skipping prep is why Florida exteriors fail early, so Landmark does not skip it.
How often does a Florida commercial exterior need repainting?
It depends on exposure, substrate, and the quality of the last job. Fading, chalking, and hairline cracking are the usual signals it is time.
Do you handle painting as part of larger projects?
Constantly. Painting is one of the twelve service lines under one contract, so a build-out or facade recoat includes finish painting without a second vendor.
One call. Full scope.
Hard-number estimate and schedule commitment before contract.