Kissimmee Concrete & Masonry repairs and builds concrete block walls, stucco finishes, driveways, and retaining walls for Buenaventura Lakes homeowners - a team familiar with the CBS construction standard common in this Osceola County community since 2018, with free written estimates and one-business-day replies.

Buenaventura Lakes was built almost entirely with CBS (concrete block structure) construction, and block walls here face the twin pressures of Florida's thermal cycling and a water table that can push against foundations and retaining features after heavy rains. Our concrete block wall work covers both new construction and repair, built to Osceola County code and finished to match existing stucco.
Homes in Buenaventura Lakes are 30 to 50 years old, and foundations built on Osceola County's flat, sandy soil have experienced decades of wet-dry cycling that can cause settling and cracking. Interior wall cracks and doors that stick are early warning signs that we can assess before the problem requires more invasive - and more expensive - structural work.
The stucco finish on Buenaventura Lakes homes protects the block underneath from moisture, but it develops hairline cracks from decades of Florida heat. We restore deteriorated stucco and repoint failing mortar joints before water gets behind the surface, preventing the kind of hidden moisture damage that is expensive to remediate once it takes hold.
Concrete driveways on Buenaventura Lakes homes built in the 1970s and 1980s are often original and show significant cracking, heaving, and surface pitting. Paver replacement gives you a driveway that handles Florida drainage better than a plain slab and can be repaired section by section rather than replaced entirely if a spot fails later.
Flat yards near Lake Buenaventura and the retention areas throughout the community can hold standing water after storms, which over time undermines landscaping, erodes soil around foundations, and heaves concrete flatwork. A properly graded retaining wall redirects that water before it causes lasting damage.
On older Buenaventura Lakes homes where decorative brick features or exposed block sections are part of the exterior, mortar joints deteriorate from the same wet-dry cycling that affects all masonry in Central Florida. Tuckpointing replaces the failed mortar and seals the joint against the daily summer rains before larger damage develops.
Most homes in Buenaventura Lakes were built between the mid-1970s and mid-1990s, making them 30 to 50 years old. CBS construction with a stucco finish was the standard across this entire subdivision, which means virtually every home here has the same exterior materials facing the same Florida weather. At that age, stucco cracks, mortar joints fail, and original concrete flatwork - driveways, walkways, and patios - shows cracking and heaving from decades of thermal cycling and root pressure. These are predictable, recurring problems, and they are manageable when caught early.
Buenaventura Lakes is an unincorporated community, so all masonry permits go through Osceola County. The flat terrain here - much of which was originally scrubland and wetland before development - means drainage challenges are part of daily life for homeowners, especially near the retention ponds and low-lying areas throughout the community. A masonry contractor who understands both the building types common in Buenaventura Lakes and the county permit process reduces delays and avoids rework that happens when contractors unfamiliar with the area guess at local requirements.
Our crew works throughout Buenaventura Lakes regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect masonry contractor work here. The community's homes are almost entirely CBS construction with stucco exteriors, which means our team encounters the same building type on job after job in this neighborhood - we know what to look for and how the materials have aged over the past three to five decades.
The main roads through Buenaventura Lakes connect to US-441 (Orange Blossom Trail), which puts the community within easy reach for our crews coming from Kissimmee. The streets inside the subdivision are dense and close together, so we plan access and staging carefully to avoid blocking neighbors. Homes near Lake Buenaventura and the low-lying areas close to the retention ponds often need drainage-aware approaches to foundation and flatwork repairs. We also serve nearby Hunters Creek and Kissimmee, and we know the full area well.
Call us or fill out the contact form on this page. We respond within one business day and schedule an on-site estimate at a time that works for your household - evenings and weekends available for homeowners with busy schedules.
We visit your Buenaventura Lakes property, assess the work in person, and provide a written estimate with no hidden charges. We will tell you honestly whether a repair, partial replacement, or full replacement is the right call - and why.
For jobs that need an Osceola County permit, we handle the application. Once the permit is in hand, we give you a confirmed start date and show up when we said we would - no reschedule surprises.
Our crew completes the work, clears all debris, and walks through the finished job with you before we leave. If you have questions after the fact, you can reach us directly - no voicemail loops.
We serve Buenaventura Lakes homeowners with free written estimates, Osceola County permit handling, and a team that knows CBS construction inside and out.
(407) 305-0267Buenaventura Lakes is an unincorporated community in Osceola County, located just east of Kissimmee and about 25 miles south of downtown Orlando. The area was developed as a planned residential subdivision beginning in the mid-1970s, and most of the housing stock was built between 1975 and 1995. With a population of roughly 26,000 to 28,000 people, it is one of the larger unincorporated communities in Osceola County - a densely packed, predominantly residential neighborhood where single-family homes on modest lots line street after street. The community has a strong owner-occupancy base and a significant Hispanic population, many with roots in Puerto Rico and other parts of Latin America, giving Buenaventura Lakes a distinct neighborhood identity within the broader Osceola County area. For more background on the community, see the Wikipedia entry for Buenaventura Lakes.
The community sits on flat, low-lying land that was previously scrubland and wetland, and homes near Lake Buenaventura and the area's retention ponds are particularly familiar with drainage challenges after heavy summer rains. US-441 (Orange Blossom Trail) runs along the western edge of the community and connects residents to Kissimmee, the Florida Turnpike, and the broader Orlando metro. Home values have risen steadily alongside the Central Florida market, making routine maintenance an investment worth protecting. We also serve the nearby communities of Kissimmee and Poinciana, covering a broad swath of Osceola County from one crew base.
Restore your foundation's stability and protect your property's structural integrity.
Learn MoreFix cracks, spalling, and deterioration to keep your chimney safe and functional.
Learn MoreReplace damaged bricks and restore the appearance of your walls or structures.
Learn MoreBuild solid retaining walls that control erosion and shape your landscape.
Learn MoreRevive aging masonry surfaces to their original strength and appearance.
Learn MoreDesign and install a custom masonry fireplace as a lasting focal point.
Learn MoreAdd natural stone veneer to elevate the look of any interior or exterior surface.
Learn MoreConstruct sturdy concrete block walls for residential and commercial properties.
Learn MoreInstall reinforced block foundations built to last for decades.
Learn MoreCreate a custom outdoor kitchen with durable masonry built for Florida living.
Learn MoreCraft stunning stone masonry features for any residential or commercial project.
Learn MoreHomes here are 30 to 50 years old and the Florida rainy season does not wait - reach us now for a free on-site assessment before the next storm season arrives.