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Commercial Concrete Restoration in South Florida

Concrete is the structural backbone of every commercial building in South Florida. When it deteriorates, the entire structure is at risk. Spalling soffits, delaminating balconies, corroded rebar, cracked columns, and deteriorating parking decks are not cosmetic issues. They are structural failures that worsen with every rain event and every passing month. Anthony Pennacchi & Sons has been restoring commercial concrete structures across South Florida since 1947, bringing 75+ years of expertise to every project from single-story retail to high-rise condominiums.

75+
Years Experience
3,000+
Projects Completed
50+
Awards Won
24/7
Emergency Service
Commercial concrete restoration services by Anthony Pennacchi and Sons

Why Concrete Fails in South Florida

Chloride-Induced Corrosion: The Primary Threat

The single greatest threat to commercial concrete in South Florida is chloride-induced corrosion of embedded reinforcing steel. Airborne salt from the Atlantic Ocean and Intracoastal Waterway penetrates the concrete cover over years and decades, eventually reaching the embedded rebar. Once chloride ions reach a critical concentration at the rebar level, corrosion initiates. The corroding steel expands to three to six times its original volume, generating enormous internal pressure that cracks and delaminates the concrete from the inside out.

This process is invisible until it reaches an advanced stage. By the time you see a concrete spall on a balcony soffit or parking deck, the corrosion damage behind it is significantly larger than the visible failure. That is why professional concrete condition assessments using sounding, half-cell testing, and chloride sampling are critical. They reveal the full extent of deterioration and allow for targeted, cost-effective restoration rather than reactive emergency repairs.

Carbonation, Sulfate Attack, and ASR

Beyond chloride corrosion, South Florida concrete faces additional deterioration mechanisms. Carbonation occurs as atmospheric carbon dioxide reacts with the concrete's alkaline pore solution, lowering the pH that normally protects embedded steel. Once the carbonation front reaches the rebar, corrosion begins even without chloride contamination. Sulfate attack occurs when sulfate-bearing groundwater or soil reacts with cement compounds, causing expansion and cracking. Alkali-silica reaction occurs when reactive aggregates react with cement alkalis in the presence of moisture, forming an expansive gel.

Our concrete corrosion guide explains these mechanisms in detail and what property owners can do to protect their buildings.

Concrete Restoration Services We Provide

Spalling and Delamination Repair

Removal of deteriorated concrete, treatment and coating of exposed rebar, and patching with corrosion-inhibiting repair mortar. We match the existing surface profile and finish for seamless results.

Rebar Corrosion Treatment

Mechanical cleaning of corroded reinforcing steel to bright metal, application of corrosion-inhibiting primer, supplemental rebar installation where section loss exceeds design thresholds, and encapsulation in protective repair mortar.

Structural Column and Beam Repair

Load-bearing concrete members require engineered repair designs. We work with structural engineers to develop repair specifications that restore original load capacity, including carbon fiber reinforcement when needed.

Parking Garage Restoration

Comprehensive rehabilitation of parking structures including deck coating removal, concrete repair, expansion joint replacement, traffic coating application, drainage improvements, and structural waterproofing.

Balcony and Walkway Restoration

Overhead and elevated concrete repair on balconies, breezeways, and exterior walkways. Includes soffit repair, railing post anchorage assessment, slope correction for drainage, and waterproof coating application.

Crack Repair and Injection

Epoxy injection for structural crack repair that restores full tensile strength across the crack plane. Polyurethane foam injection for active water leaks. Routing and sealing for non-structural surface cracks.

Cathodic Protection Systems

Impressed current and galvanic anode cathodic protection systems for buildings with extensive chloride contamination where concrete removal is impractical. This electrochemical approach stops corrosion in place.

Protective Coatings and Sealers

After repairs, we apply penetrating sealers, traffic coatings, or elastomeric coatings to prevent future moisture and chloride ingress. This post-repair protection is critical to long-term restoration durability.

Call (561) 475-0775 for a Free Assessment

No obligation. Response within 24 hours. FL License CGC1538576.

Our Concrete Restoration Process

1

Structural Investigation

Sounding survey, half-cell potential mapping, chloride sampling, carbonation testing, and GPR scanning. We determine the full extent of deterioration and the root cause before specifying any repairs.

2

Engineering and Specification

We develop repair specifications in coordination with structural engineers that address both the immediate damage and the underlying corrosion mechanism. This ensures long-term restoration durability.

3

Concrete Removal

We remove all deteriorated and delaminated concrete to a minimum of 1 inch beyond the rebar on all sides. This ensures contaminated material does not remain in contact with the reinforcing steel.

4

Rebar Treatment and Repair

Exposed rebar is cleaned to bright metal, primed with corrosion inhibitor, supplemented where needed, and encapsulated in engineered repair mortar. Each repair is built in lifts and cured properly.

5

Protection and Documentation

Protective sealers or coatings are applied to the completed surface. Full documentation including material certifications, inspection reports, and warranty information is provided.

Signs Your Building Needs Concrete Restoration

Visible Spalling or Delamination

Concrete falling from soffits, columns, or beams indicates advanced corrosion of embedded rebar. This is a safety hazard and a sign that the deterioration is significantly more extensive than what is visible.

Rust Staining on Concrete Surfaces

Orange or brown staining bleeding through the concrete surface indicates active corrosion of the reinforcing steel. The staining appears before visible cracking or spalling and is an early warning sign.

Cracking Patterns Following Rebar Lines

Linear cracks that follow the pattern of the reinforcing steel (typically in a grid pattern) indicate corrosion-induced expansion. These cracks are precursors to delamination and spalling.

Hollow Sound When Tapped

Concrete that sounds hollow when struck with a hammer or chain indicates delamination beneath the surface. The concrete has separated from the substrate but has not yet fallen away. This is a latent hazard.

Water Leaking Through Concrete Slabs

Active water penetration through parking decks, balconies, or elevated walkways indicates the waterproofing has failed and moisture is reaching the structural reinforcing. Corrosion is accelerating.

Building is 25 or More Years Old

In South Florida's coastal environment, chloride contamination typically reaches reinforcing steel within 15 to 25 years depending on concrete quality and cover depth. A building approaching this age should have a proactive condition assessment.

Noticing any of these signs? Do not wait for the damage to spread.

Get Your Free Inspection, (561) 475-0775

Free on-site assessment. 4th-generation experts. 75+ years of experience.

Frequently Asked Questions: Commercial Concrete Restoration

Schedule a Free Structural Assessment with South Florida's Concrete Experts

Concrete deterioration accelerates exponentially. The damage you see today will be significantly worse in six months. Anthony Pennacchi & Sons has restored commercial concrete structures across South Florida since 1947. Call today for a professional assessment before repair costs escalate further.