Structural Restoration in
Boynton Beach has a large stock of 1970s through 1990s oceanfront and Intracoastal condominiums entering Florida's SB 4-D 25-year coastal inspection window, alongside Palm Beach County's parallel building safety requirements. CORE Builder Group delivers structural restoration in Boynton Beach with your engineer or ours.
Reviewed by Ryan Perez, Managing Partner · Last reviewed
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How SB 4-D and Palm Beach County requirements apply in Boynton Beach.
Boynton Beach's oceanfront and Intracoastal condominium corridor falls within the three-mile Atlantic threshold that triggers SB 4-D's 25-year milestone inspection for qualifying buildings. Palm Beach County's building safety inspection framework runs alongside the state statute. The city's 1970s–1990s building inventory is actively moving through the inspection cycle — boards that have completed the milestone inspection and have engineer-identified deficiencies face remediation timelines that must be met before re-inspection sign-off.
What restoration scope looks like in Boynton Beach.
Engineering reports on Boynton Beach's coastal buildings most commonly identify chloride-driven rebar corrosion, concrete spalling at balcony soffits and columns, post-tension tendon deterioration in parking and amenity decks, and envelope failures at window and sliding-door perimeters. The city's older 1970s buildings tend to have more advanced deterioration than newer 1990s towers, but the failure modes are the same — salt exposure drives the damage regardless of vintage. CORE delivers concrete, PT, and waterproofing scope as integrated work under the engineer's stamp.
- Concrete spall repair and rebar replacement
- Post-tensioning cable repair and re-stressing
- Balcony slab and railing restoration
- Façade and stucco rebuild
- Building envelope re-waterproofing
- Pool deck and amenity-deck restoration
How CORE delivers a Boynton Beach restoration project.
Boynton Beach restoration projects are almost always occupied — residents stay, amenities remain open. CORE phases work floor-by-floor or stack-by-stack with balcony access schedules, dust containment, and board communication throughout. If the board already has a structural engineer, CORE works with that team directly. If not, CORE connects the project with its panel of partner engineers. Restoration permits are issued by the City of Boynton Beach Building Division; CORE prepares permit packages with the engineer of record at scope finalization.
Ready to scope a Boynton Beach project? CORE will walk the building, connect you with a partner engineer if you need one, and put a fixed plan in front of the board.
Request an assessmentQuestions from Boynton Beach boards and owners.
- Is my Boynton Beach condominium subject to SB 4-D?
- If your building is a condominium or cooperative three stories or higher and was completed 25 or more years ago, and is within three miles of the Atlantic coast, yes. Boynton Beach's oceanfront and Intracoastal corridor falls within that threshold for most addresses, triggering the 25-year milestone inspection under Florida Statute § 553.899.
- What Palm Beach County inspection requirements apply in Boynton Beach?
- Following the 2021 Surfside collapse, Palm Beach County adopted building safety inspection requirements that run alongside the statewide SB 4-D framework. Boards in Boynton Beach should confirm the applicable requirements for their building with a Florida-licensed structural engineer or attorney.
- What restoration scope is typical in a Boynton Beach building?
- Engineering reports on Boynton Beach buildings most commonly flag chloride-driven rebar corrosion, concrete spalling at balcony soffits and columns, post-tension tendon deterioration in parking and amenity decks, and envelope failures at window perimeters. Scope typically combines concrete spall repair, rebar replacement, PT repair, balcony rebuilds, and building-envelope re-waterproofing.
- Do I need an engineer before contacting CORE?
- No. If your board already has a structural engineer, CORE works with them directly. If not, CORE connects you with its panel of partner engineers who specialize in South Florida coastal restoration. CORE is the right first call.
- Can residents stay during restoration in Boynton Beach?
- In most cases, yes. CORE phases work stack-by-stack or floor-by-floor with phased balcony access and dust containment. Scopes requiring slab access below an occupied unit may involve brief temporary relocation; CORE coordinates this with the board in advance.
- What is the typical timeline in Boynton Beach?
- A full structural restoration scope on an occupied Boynton Beach mid-rise typically runs 90 to 150 days from mobilization to final punch. Smaller scopes close in 30 to 60 days. Timeline variables include scope depth, permitting, and occupancy constraints.
- How does City of Boynton Beach permitting work?
- Restoration work requires permits from the City of Boynton Beach Building Division. CORE prepares permit packages with the engineer of record at scope finalization to minimize permit review cycle time.
- Is post-tensioning common in Boynton Beach buildings?
- Yes, in buildings from the late 1970s onward — particularly at elevated parking decks and amenity decks. Unbonded mono-strand PT is prevalent in Palm Beach County construction; salt exposure accelerates corrosion. CORE self-performs PT repair with in-house trained crews.
- What SB 4-D deadlines apply to Boynton Beach buildings?
- Buildings that reached 25 years by December 31, 2024 were required to complete Phase I of the milestone inspection by December 31, 2024. Buildings turning 25 after that date must complete Phase I within 180 days. Boards should confirm their specific deadline with their attorney and structural engineer.
- Has CORE worked near Boynton Beach?
- CORE operates across the South Florida coastal corridor including Palm Beach County and is licensed as a State of Florida Certified General Contractor. The firm has been performing structural restoration in South Florida since 2013.
- Florida Statute § 553.899 — Mandatory structural inspections (milestone)www.flsenate.gov
- Palm Beach County — Development Services / Building Divisiondiscover.pbcgov.org
- City of Boynton Beach — Building Divisionwww.boynton-beach.org
Information on this page is for general orientation and does not constitute legal or engineering advice. Building owners should engage a Florida-licensed Professional Engineer or Architect and consult their municipal building department for project-specific guidance.
Deadline coming up in Boynton Beach? CORE works with your engineer or connects you with one — and puts a fixed plan in front of the board within 7 days.