
CCM Cape Coral Masonry delivers driveway pavers, retaining walls, and outdoor kitchen masonry to Bonita Springs homeowners - serving the area from our Cape Coral base and familiar with the HOA approval requirements in Bonita Bay, Pelican Landing, and other gated communities throughout the city.
Bonita Springs homes face masonry challenges that are specific to this stretch of the Gulf Coast - saltwater air from Estero Bay, sandy soil that shifts under driveways and pool decks, and the aftermath of Hurricane Ian, which left visible masonry damage across much of the city in 2022.

Paver driveways are common in Bonita Springs gated communities, and the sandy coastal soil here makes base preparation the part of the job that determines whether a surface stays level for decades. Our driveway paver service includes proper base excavation, compaction suited to Southwest Florida soil, and a sealed finish to protect against salt air fading and the UV intensity along the Gulf Coast.
Much of Bonita Springs sits at low elevation near the Imperial River and Estero Bay, and standing water after heavy summer rain is a real problem on many properties. A properly designed retaining or drainage wall redirects water away from foundations and landscaping - and concrete block is the right material for walls that will face repeated water exposure in this climate.
Outdoor living is central to life in Bonita Springs, and a large percentage of homes have screened lanais and pool decks built for year-round use. An outdoor kitchen with a masonry surround extends that space into a proper cooking and gathering area - and the masonry materials we use are selected to hold up against Gulf humidity and salt air, not just look good at installation.
Pool decks and walkways on Bonita Springs properties take a beating from the Florida sun year-round. UV exposure cracks and fades unsealed paver surfaces faster than in inland markets, and the combination of heat and afternoon rains creates the kind of surface movement that shows up as uneven joints and shifted pavers within a few years if the base was not built properly.
Most Bonita Springs homes were built between the 1980s and early 2000s - old enough that original stucco coatings and mortar joints are showing wear. Salt-laden air from the Gulf accelerates mortar breakdown on exterior walls, and homes that took wind and moisture damage from Hurricane Ian may have cracking that is not fully visible from the street.
Bonita Springs sits along the Imperial River and borders Estero Bay and the Gulf of Mexico, which means most homes in the city deal with salt air year-round. Salt particles are hard on masonry - they work into mortar joints and stucco surfaces, gradually breaking down the material from the inside in a way that does not show up until the damage is already significant. The majority of the housing stock here was built during the 1980s and 1990s, which means many homes are now 25 to 45 years old - precisely the age range when exterior stucco finishes, mortar joints, and paver driveways need serious attention. Add in the UV intensity along the Gulf Coast, roughly 53 inches of annual rain falling mostly in the summer months, and the storm damage from Hurricane Ian in September 2022, and you have conditions that wear on masonry faster than most homeowners plan for.
Many Bonita Springs properties also sit inside gated communities with active homeowners associations - Bonita Bay, Pelican Landing, and Spanish Wells are among the most well-known - and those HOAs have specific rules about exterior materials, colors, and modifications. A masonry contractor who has not worked in these communities before may not know what documentation is required before work can begin, or what material choices will pass architectural review. Cutting corners on the HOA approval process can mean tearing out completed work at the homeowner's expense. Bonita Springs also has a significant population of seasonal residents whose homes sit empty for months at a time, which means deferred maintenance problems can go unnoticed and compound before anyone is around to see them.
We pull permits for Bonita Springs projects through Lee County Building and Development Services, which handles permitting for unincorporated Lee County including most of Bonita Springs. We know the application process, what the county requires for different project types, and how to keep a job on schedule through the permit review window without delays from incomplete submissions.
Bonita Springs sits at the southern end of the Cape Coral-Fort Myers metro area, bordered by Estero to the north and Estero and Naples to the south. Major roads like Bonita Beach Road, US-41, and Imperial Parkway run through the city, and the mix of canal-front neighborhoods near the Imperial River and upscale inland communities off Ben Hill Griffin Parkway means soil conditions and drainage challenges vary quite a bit depending on where in the city a property sits. Homes near Barefoot Beach and along the barrier island face the most direct salt air exposure, while homes further inland deal more with drainage and soil movement from summer flooding.
We also serve nearby Fort Myers and the broader Lee County area regularly, so our crews are familiar with the soil profiles, permit workflows, and HOA documentation requirements that show up throughout this part of Southwest Florida. That familiarity cuts down on surprises - both for the crew and for the homeowner.
We respond within 1 business day. Tell us what you are planning - a paver driveway, a retaining wall, an outdoor kitchen - and we schedule a time to visit the property. No commitment needed to get a site visit.
A contractor visits your property, assesses the soil conditions, drainage, and any HOA requirements, and gives you a written, itemized estimate. If your community requires design approval, we explain what that process involves and can help prepare the documentation.
Many Bonita Springs properties require both HOA architectural review and a Lee County building permit before work begins. We manage both processes and schedule the crew start date around approvals, which typically adds one to two weeks of lead time.
The crew completes the job, cleans the work area, and we coordinate any required inspections. Once the work passes inspection, we walk you through the finished project and hand over all documentation before leaving.
We serve Bonita Springs homeowners directly from our Cape Coral base - free estimates, no obligation, and we handle all permit and HOA paperwork on your behalf.
(239) 347-0846Bonita Springs is a city in Lee County with a permanent population of around 60,000 people, incorporated in 1999 after decades of rapid growth. It sits at the southern end of the Cape Coral-Fort Myers metro area, one of the fastest-growing metros in the United States. The city borders Estero to the north and Naples to the south, with the Gulf of Mexico and Estero Bay forming its western edge. A large share of residents are retirees or near-retirees who have relocated from colder states, and the city has a significant seasonal population that swells during the winter months. Well-known neighborhoods include Bonita Bay - a large gated development with a marina and golf courses along the Imperial River - Pelican Landing, and Spanish Wells. Single-family homes in gated communities make up the majority of the housing stock, with stucco-over-concrete-block construction standard throughout the city. According to publicly available records, Bonita Springs has one of the higher median home values in Lee County, with many properties valued well above the state average.
The city is built along and around the Imperial River, with a network of canals and waterways that give many homes direct or near-direct water access. That waterfront character is one of Bonita Springs' defining features, but it also means a large number of properties deal with moisture-related maintenance issues that inland homes do not. Homes within walking distance of Barefoot Beach Preserve - one of the last undeveloped barrier island beaches in Southwest Florida - face the most direct salt air exposure, while inland communities deal more with flooding and soil drainage challenges. We work throughout the city, from waterfront properties near Bonita Beach Road to inland communities off Imperial Parkway. We also serve nearby Naples, just south of Bonita Springs along the Gulf Coast.






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Serving these cities and communities.
CCM Cape Coral Masonry serves Bonita Springs homeowners across all neighborhoods - from gated communities to canal-front properties. Call us or submit a contact form and we will respond within 1 business day.