Commercial Site Work Contractors in Central Florida
Commercial site work contractors in Central Florida perform the ground-level preparation and infrastructure installation that precedes vertical construction on commercial properties. This reference covers the scope of site work services, how projects are structured and licensed, the regulatory framework across the five-county metro area, and how site work contractors are distinguished from other commercial trades. Understanding these boundaries is essential for project owners, general contractors, and developers navigating the Orlando metropolitan construction market.
Definition and scope
Commercial site work encompasses all earthwork, grading, drainage, utility rough-ins, paving, and erosion control operations performed on a parcel before or concurrent with building construction. In Florida, contractors performing this work on commercial projects must hold licensure issued by the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR), typically under the Underground Utility and Excavation Contractor or Site Work/Land Development categories, depending on the specific trades involved.
The Central Florida commercial site work sector spans five primary counties — Orange, Osceola, Seminole, Lake, and Volusia — each administering its own permitting and inspection authority under the Florida Building Code (FBC), 7th Edition. Site work contractors operate at the intersection of civil engineering, environmental compliance, and construction scheduling, making their role foundational to project delivery timelines.
Site work scope is distinct from vertical construction. A commercial general contractor manages the building envelope and interior systems; the site work contractor prepares the land and installs below-grade infrastructure before the building contractor can commence. This distinction has direct implications for licensing, bonding, and contract structure.
How it works
Commercial site work projects follow a structured sequence tied to permit issuance and civil engineering approvals. The typical workflow involves six phases:
- Pre-construction civil review — Site plans are reviewed by county engineering departments for stormwater management, grading compliance, and utility coordination. In Orange County, this falls under the Orange County Environmental Protection Division and the Development Engineering section.
- Permitting — Separate permits are typically required for clearing and grubbing, grading and drainage, and underground utilities. The central Florida commercial building permit process for site work runs parallel to architectural plan review.
- Clearing and demolition — Existing vegetation, structures, and pavement are removed in accordance with the approved tree survey and environmental permits.
- Mass grading — Earthwork establishes finish grade elevations per the civil engineer's cut/fill plan. South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) Environmental Resource Permits govern stormwater management design across the region.
- Underground utility installation — Storm sewer, sanitary sewer, potable water mains, and dry utilities are installed, inspected, and backfilled before surface improvements begin. Work affecting public rights-of-way requires Right-of-Way permits from the relevant county or Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) district.
- Surface improvements — Paving, curbing, sidewalks, signage foundations, and landscape grading complete the site package ahead of building turnover.
Central Florida pre-construction services — including geotechnical investigation and survey control — are typically contracted before site work begins and directly inform the contractor's operational approach.
Common scenarios
Site work contractors in Central Florida operate across 4 primary commercial development categories:
Ground-up retail and mixed-use development — Large-format retail and multi-tenant pads require extensive grading, shared detention systems, and coordination with multiple utility providers including Duke Energy, OUC, and municipal water authorities. Central Florida retail commercial construction projects frequently involve phased site work to accommodate pad delivery sequences.
Industrial and warehouse development — Tilt-up and pre-engineered metal buildings on large parcels in Osceola, Lake, and Volusia counties require high-precision grading to meet slab-on-grade tolerances. Central Florida warehouse and industrial contractors depend on site work completion before structural erection can begin.
Medical and institutional construction — Central Florida medical office and commercial construction projects add complexity through fire suppression line coordination, ADA-compliant grading (see ADA compliance standards), and Life Safety pathway requirements.
Tenant improvement and redevelopment — Renovation of existing commercial properties may require partial site work, particularly for utility upgrades or ADA-required accessibility path corrections. Commercial renovation contractors coordinate with site work specialists when below-grade systems are modified.
Decision boundaries
Selecting a site work contractor requires distinguishing among license types, project scale thresholds, and delivery models. The commercial contractor license requirements for Central Florida establish that Underground Utility and Excavation contractors are licensed separately from General Contractors, and a General Contractor's license does not automatically authorize underground utility work.
Site work contractor vs. civil engineering firm — A licensed civil engineer designs the grading and drainage systems; the site work contractor executes that design. On projects requiring SFWMD Environmental Resource Permits, the engineer of record signs and seals the permit application. The contractor performs the physical work under that design.
Self-perform vs. subcontracted site work — Many commercial general contractors subcontract site work entirely. Subcontractor management on these projects requires the GC to coordinate permit sequencing, inspection scheduling, and utility owner notifications across the site work package.
Design-build vs. bid-build delivery — Under design-build delivery, a single firm holds both the civil engineering and site work execution contracts, compressing the permitting timeline. Bid-build separates design from construction, placing the owner at the center of coordination between the civil engineer and the site contractor.
Hurricane wind load requirements do not apply directly to site work, but retention wall and utility vault designs in the region must conform to FBC structural provisions that account for high-wind and flood zone classifications.
Florida lien law applies to site work contractors as first-tier and second-tier subcontractors, requiring Notice to Owner filings within 45 days of first furnishing labor or materials (Florida Statutes §713.13).
Geographic scope and limitations
This reference covers commercial site work contractor activity within the Central Florida metropolitan area, defined as Orange, Osceola, Seminole, Lake, and Volusia counties. Permitting authorities, stormwater rules, and local ordinances vary by county; the Orange County regulations page, Osceola County regulations, Seminole County regulations, Lake County regulations, and Volusia County regulations each address jurisdiction-specific requirements.
This reference does not apply to residential site work, agricultural land clearing outside commercial development, or projects located in Polk, Brevard, or Flagler counties. State-level licensing rules from DBPR apply uniformly across Florida, but local permit fees, review timelines, and inspection protocols described here reflect Central Florida metro conditions only. The main contractor services index provides broader context for the full scope of commercial contractor categories covered within this authority.
References
- Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) — Contractor Licensing
- Florida Building Code, 7th Edition — Florida Building Commission
- South Florida Water Management District — Environmental Resource Permits
- Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) — Utility and Right-of-Way Permits
- Orange County, Florida — Environmental Protection Division
- Florida Statutes §713 — Construction Liens
- Florida Building Commission — Code Development