
Port Orange Deck & Fence builds pool decks, wood and composite decks, screened porches, pergolas, and fences for homeowners across New Smyrna Beach - both the beachside barrier island and the mainland. We have been serving Volusia County since 2016 and know exactly what salt air, summer storms, and sandy soil do to outdoor structures here.

New Smyrna Beach properties with pools - whether on the beachside or the mainland - need decking that stands up to constant moisture, foot traffic, and the salt-air environment. Slip resistance, material durability, and proper drainage around the pool edge are all critical in this climate. Our pool deck construction service covers concrete overlay, composite, and pressure-treated options sized and detailed for this specific coastal environment.
Composite decking is one of the best-performing materials for New Smyrna Beach's coastal conditions. It does not absorb moisture, it resists the UV degradation that bleaches and cracks wood, and it holds up well against the salt air that attacks unprotected wood on beachside and near-coast properties. Composite also eliminates the annual staining and sealing maintenance that wood requires in this climate.
Mosquito pressure in New Smyrna Beach is significant from late spring through fall, and the afternoon thunderstorm season from June through September makes unscreened outdoor space hard to enjoy. A screened porch or screened deck gives you the view and the breeze without the bugs or the rain. Beachside homes particularly benefit because a screened enclosure also reduces the amount of salt-air-driven corrosion on exterior fixtures and furniture.
Vinyl fencing holds up better than wood in New Smyrna Beach's coastal environment because it does not rust, rot, or require painting. Beachside and near-coast homes where salt air rapidly breaks down wood finishes are ideal candidates for vinyl. Vinyl post systems and rail profiles are also easier to keep clean than wood when the salt and humidity combine to promote mildew growth on exterior surfaces.
New Smyrna Beach's long outdoor season - mild winters and warm springs and falls - makes a pergola a high-value addition to the backyard. The challenge in coastal locations is selecting hardware and finish treatments that resist salt-air corrosion over time. We size pergola footings to meet Volusia County wind-load requirements, which matters on barrier island properties that face direct Atlantic exposure during storm season.
Many of New Smyrna Beach's older homes near the Canal Street historic district and on the beachside have wooden decks and platforms that are 20 to 40 years old. In the coastal climate, wood at that age often shows significant rot, fastener corrosion, and structural weakening. We assess whether targeted repairs extend the life of the structure or whether a full replacement with a more durable material is the better long-term choice.
New Smyrna Beach sits on Florida's central Atlantic coast in Volusia County and is divided into two distinct areas: the mainland side west of the Intracoastal Waterway and the beachside barrier island to the east. The two sides have different housing stock, different lot sizes, and different maintenance demands. Beachside homes face constant salt air blowing in off the Atlantic, which accelerates corrosion on metal fasteners and brackets, degrades paint and staining finishes faster than inland properties, and shortens the service life of unprotected wood surfaces. Mainland homes have more protection from direct ocean exposure but still deal with the high humidity, afternoon thunderstorms, and sandy soil that characterize the Volusia County climate. A contractor needs to understand both environments and specify materials and methods appropriately for each one.
The housing stock in New Smyrna Beach spans a wide range of ages. Many of the homes near the Canal Street historic district and on the beachside were built between the 1950s and 1970s and are now 50 to 70 years old. These older concrete block and wood-frame structures have different attachment requirements and setback histories than the newer mainland subdivisions built in the 1990s and 2000s. The city also has a significant number of vacation rental properties, which see heavier-than-average use and need outdoor structures that hold up to more frequent traffic and less attentive maintenance. New Smyrna Beach also falls within Volusia County's hurricane wind-load zone, meaning permitted decks, fences, and pergolas must be engineered and built to meet those structural standards.
Our crew works throughout New Smyrna Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect deck builder work here. For permitted projects, we file through the City of New Smyrna Beach Building Division and are familiar with its plan review process and inspection schedule. Beachside projects that fall within FEMA flood zones require additional review of the property's base flood elevation before we finalize footing and post-height details, and we work through that at the estimate stage so nothing comes up as a surprise during construction.
New Smyrna Beach is connected to the mainland by bridges over the Intracoastal Waterway, and much of the local day-to-day traffic moves along US-1 and State Road A1A. The historic downtown along Canal Street is well known to everyone who lives here, and the neighborhoods that fan out from it contain many of the city's older homes. Further south, near Canaveral National Seashore, properties sit at the edge of undeveloped coastline and face the most direct Atlantic exposure of any location in the area. We have worked on homes throughout both the beachside and mainland sections of New Smyrna Beach and know what each environment demands.
We also serve homeowners in the area towns close to New Smyrna Beach. If your property is in Edgewater just to the north, or in Port Orange further up the coast, we cover those areas as well.
Reach us by phone at (386) 400-1327 or through our online contact form. We respond to every New Smyrna Beach inquiry within one business day.
We visit your New Smyrna Beach property to measure, assess site conditions including flood zone status for beachside lots, and review material options. You receive a written itemized quote before any work is scheduled - no guesswork on cost.
For permitted projects, we submit to the City of New Smyrna Beach Building Division and notify you when approval comes through. Most permit reviews in New Smyrna Beach take two to four weeks, and we track the process so you do not have to.
Our crew builds on-site, passes required inspections, and does a final walkthrough with you before considering the job complete. Most deck builds in New Smyrna Beach take one to three weeks of active construction.
We serve both the beachside and mainland areas of New Smyrna Beach. Call us or submit the form below and we will get back to you within one business day.
(386) 400-1327New Smyrna Beach is a small coastal city of about 28,000 residents located in southern Volusia County on Florida's central Atlantic coast. The city is split into two distinct sections: the mainland side west of the Intracoastal Waterway and the barrier island beachside to the east, connected by bridges. The beachside is best known for its consistent surf - New Smyrna Beach is widely recognized as one of the best surf spots on the East Coast - and its compact grid of homes, condos, and older vacation cottages that sit close to the Atlantic. The mainland side is more spread out, with a mix of mid-century ranch homes from the 1950s through 1970s, newer subdivisions from the 2000s, and commercial development along US-1. According to the city's history, New Smyrna Beach has one of the highest rates of owner-occupied homes in Volusia County, which reflects a community of homeowners who invest in maintaining and improving their properties.
The historic downtown along Canal Street is the center of community life on the mainland, lined with local shops, galleries, and restaurants that draw both residents and visitors. The city has a well-established arts identity and attracts homebuyers from larger Florida cities and out of state, which has driven significant property value appreciation in recent years. Many homes near Canal Street and throughout the older beachside neighborhoods were built in the 1950s through 1970s and have distinct architectural character. Neighboring communities include Edgewater to the north along the Indian River Lagoon and Daytona Beach further up the coast in northern Volusia County.
Get a one-of-a-kind deck designed and built to fit your home perfectly.
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Learn MoreWhether your home is on the beachside or the mainland, call us today for a free on-site estimate - we respond within one business day.