
North Lauderdale Deck & Fence serves Coral Springs homeowners with pergola installation, custom decks, pool decks, composite decking, vinyl and wood fences, and screened enclosures - all permitted and built to handle Broward County wind-load requirements and Florida humidity year-round. We have been working throughout Broward County since 2018 and reply to every estimate request within one business day.

Coral Springs has a high share of homes with rear yards that back up to canals or retention ponds, and those open lots are prime candidates for a pergola - they frame the outdoor space, provide shade for the afternoon sun that peaks in the southwest, and create a defined area for outdoor living without blocking the water view. See how we approach pergola installation for South Florida properties.
Coral Springs homes from the 1970s and 1980s were built on relatively standard lot sizes - typically between 6,000 and 10,000 square feet - but many rear yards were left as plain grass with no outdoor structure. A custom-designed deck creates usable outdoor living space on those underused lots and can be engineered to navigate drainage conditions on canal-adjacent properties where the soil profile near the bank requires deeper footing placement.
Many single-family homes in Coral Springs were built with in-ground pools, particularly in the planned neighborhoods from the 1970s and 1980s. Those original pool decks are often cracked, settled, and past their service life. We build replacement pool decks with slip-resistant surfaces and drainage designed for flat Coral Springs lots where water has nowhere to go quickly after an afternoon storm.
Coral Springs gets around 60 inches of rain a year, and the humidity between rain events is relentless. Composite decking does not absorb moisture, will not warp or split at fastener points, and requires far less maintenance than pressure-treated wood in this climate. For Coral Springs homeowners who want a deck that holds up through a full hurricane season without requiring immediate post-storm attention, composite is the most practical choice.
Coral Springs HOAs frequently require consistent fence appearances throughout a neighborhood, and vinyl is one of the most common approved materials because it holds its color without painting and does not develop the rust staining that metal fasteners cause on wood fences in Florida humidity. Vinyl also performs well under the wind loads associated with tropical storms when installed with proper post depth and concrete footing.
Coral Springs is inland, which means it does not get the ocean breeze that coastal cities use to reduce mosquito pressure. Summer afternoons here can feel thick with both heat and insects after a heavy rain. A screened enclosure over a rear porch or patio makes the outdoor area genuinely usable from May through October and is one of the most cost-effective ways to add comfortable living space to a Coral Springs home.
Coral Springs was developed as a master-planned community starting in the 1960s, and most of its housing stock was built between the late 1960s and early 1990s. That puts the majority of homes in the 30-to-55-year-old range today. Homes from that era in South Florida often have outdoor structures - pool decks, screened enclosures, patios, and fences - that were built before the post-Hurricane Andrew building code changes of the mid-1990s. Those structures were not engineered to the current Broward County wind-speed requirements, and many are showing the cumulative wear of decades of Florida sun, rain, and humidity. A contractor who works regularly in Coral Springs understands both what those homes were built with and what current code requires for replacement or new construction.
Coral Springs sits on flat, low-lying land in the Everglades drainage basin, and the city has an extensive network of canals built to manage stormwater. Many homes back up directly to those canals, which affects drainage patterns, soil stability near the bank, and the conditions for any outdoor structure placed close to the water. The city also has a high concentration of planned neighborhoods with active HOAs that govern exterior modifications - any deck, pergola, or fence project here likely requires both HOA approval and a city building permit before work can begin. For information about Coral Springs permit requirements, the City of Coral Springs Community Development Department handles residential building permits.
Our crew works throughout Coral Springs regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect deck builder work here. Coral Springs has its own building permit office separate from Broward County, and we pull permits directly through that office for every residential project in the city. The city requires wind-load calculations for pergolas, attached shade structures, and larger decks, and we prepare those engineering submittals as part of our standard permit package - homeowners do not need to hire a separate engineer for the typical residential project.
The Coral Springs area is organized around a grid of major roads including University Drive, Sample Road, and Wiles Road, and most neighborhoods are tucked into the blocks between those corridors. Mullins Park on the west side of the city is one of the most used community spaces, and the Coral Springs Center for the Arts near the center of town is a landmark most long-term residents know. We have worked on homes throughout these neighborhoods - from the older ranch-style blocks near the eastern edge of the city to the newer developments closer to the Everglades on the western boundary. We also regularly serve neighboring Tamarac, which sits to the south and has a similar mix of 1970s and 1980s residential construction.
HOA coordination is a regular part of working in Coral Springs. We are used to providing the drawings, material specifications, and color samples that HOA boards request before approving an exterior modification, and we factor that review window into our project scheduling so it does not delay the permit timeline unnecessarily.
Call us or fill out the online estimate form and we will respond within one business day. We gather basic information about your property, the project type, and any HOA constraints so we arrive at the site visit prepared.
We visit the property, measure, check drainage conditions and soil near canal banks if relevant, and discuss material options. You receive a written quote with a full cost breakdown - no ballpark estimates, no surprise add-ons after you commit.
We file the permit application with Coral Springs Building Division and provide you with the documents needed for your HOA submission simultaneously. We track both processes and update you when approvals come through.
Construction proceeds once permits are in hand. We schedule the required city inspection, obtain the final sign-off, and give you the permit closeout documents - which you keep with your home records for insurance and future sale purposes.
We serve homeowners throughout Coral Springs and respond to every inquiry within one business day. No pressure, no obligation - just a straightforward conversation about what you need.
(754) 294-8977Coral Springs is a planned city in western Broward County with a population of around 134,000 people. It was developed starting in 1963 and grew rapidly through the 1970s and 1980s, becoming one of the most family-oriented communities in South Florida. The city has consistently ranked among the safest in Florida and is known for its well-maintained parks, strong school system, and high homeownership rate - around 70% of housing units are owner-occupied. More about the city's history and services is available through the Coral Springs Wikipedia entry.
The city is built on flat terrain near the western edge of the developed Broward County area, where suburban neighborhoods meet the edge of the Everglades drainage system. Most of the housing stock consists of single-family concrete block homes with tile roofs and stucco exteriors - standard Florida construction from the era when most of Coral Springs was built. Many lots back up to the city's extensive canal network, which was designed for stormwater management and gives a large number of properties a waterfront character that shapes how homeowners use and improve their outdoor space. Nearby Coconut Creek to the east and Tamarac to the south share similar housing profiles and are also within our regular service area.
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Learn MoreWe serve all of Coral Springs and respond within one business day. Call now or fill out the online form to get started.