Commercial Storm Water Management

Commercial Storm Water Management in Port St. Lucie, FL

Professional commercial storm water management for Port St. Lucie, St. Lucie County. Starting at $5,000. Licensed Professional Engineers with 100% permit approval rate.

Starting at $5,000 Water Table: 4-12 feet (generally moderate) Flood Zone: Primarily X zones with AE near waterways
What You Get

Commercial Storm Water Management Features

Comprehensive Site Design

Full stormwater management system design including pipe networks, retention and detention systems, outfall structures, and water quality treatment — engineered for Florida's regulatory requirements

Water Quality Pre-Treatment

Nutrient removal systems, sediment control BMPs, baffle boxes, and exfiltration trenches designed to meet SFWMD and FDEP water quality standards before discharge

Flood Control Engineering

Detention and retention pond design, overflow structures, and conveyance systems sized to manage peak flows from Florida's 25-year and 100-year storm events

Permit Compliance

Complete permit analysis and application management for SFWMD Environmental Resource Permits, county building permits, FDEP permits, and NPDES compliance

Infrastructure Assessment

Comprehensive evaluation of existing stormwater systems including pipe condition assessment, pond capacity analysis, and outfall performance review

Capital Improvement Planning

Strategic 5-year plans that prioritize stormwater upgrades, establish budgets, and schedule improvements to prevent system failures and maintain compliance

Why Choose StructureSmart

  • Achieve and maintain full regulatory compliance with SFWMD, county, and municipal requirements
  • Protect commercial assets from flood damage and associated business interruption
  • Reduce long-term maintenance and repair expenses through proper engineering
  • Develop a prioritized 5-year capital improvement program for budgeting
  • Reduce the impact and cost of sudden infrastructure failures
  • Minimize liability exposure from downstream flooding or water quality violations
Our Process

How It Works

From initial assessment to permit-ready plans in Port St. Lucie.

1

Our engineers inspect your property's stormwater infrastructure, evaluate drainage performance, identify problem areas, and document existing system components. We photograph conditions and collect data needed for engineering analysis.

2

We obtain original permit documents, as-built drawings, and maintenance records from agencies and property files. This historical data reveals design intent, permitted capacities, and any modifications that may have occurred since construction.

3

Using field data and record documents, our Licensed Professional Engineers perform hydrologic and hydraulic analysis, design system improvements or new infrastructure, and prepare construction-ready drawings with detailed specifications.

4

We prepare and submit all required permit applications — including SFWMD ERPs, county building permits, and FDEP authorizations. Our team manages reviewer correspondence and resolves comments to keep approvals on track.

St. Lucie County Regulations

Local Requirements for Commercial Storm Water Management

St. Lucie County Land Development Code
SFWMD Environmental Resource Permit for new development
North St. Lucie River watershed protection
Florida Building Code with local amendments
Port St. Lucie Properties

Why Port St. Lucie Properties Need Commercial Storm Water Management

The commercial corridor along US-1 and I-95 in St. Lucie County serves one of Florida's fastest-growing residential populations, driving retail and service development that must meet modern stormwater standards. Older commercial properties in Fort Pierce built before current regulations need assessment and often require upgrades to meet current SFWMD criteria.

St. Lucie County Regulatory Note Commercial development in St. Lucie County requires SFWMD Environmental Resource Permits for projects creating significant impervious surface. The county's land development code requires post-development discharge to match pre-development rates.

Local Factors in Port St. Lucie

  • C-24 canal capacity limitations during heavy rainfall — canal connects to North Fork St. Lucie River and backs up when regional water levels rise
  • Population doubled from ~89,000 (2000) to ~230,000 (2025) — drainage infrastructure designed for far lower density is severely strained by rapid suburban conversion
  • Rapid population growth driving commercial development demand along major corridors
  • Older Fort Pierce commercial areas may have legacy drainage systems below current standards
  • Master-planned community commercial parcels require coordinated drainage design
Local Drainage Conditions

St. Lucie County Soil & Drainage Profile

Annual Rainfall 53"
Design Storm 8.2" (25yr)
Soil Types
Immokalee fine sandOldsmar fine sandEauGallie fine sand

St. Lucie County soils are predominantly poorly drained Spodosols (flatwoods soils) with a cemented organic hardpan that limits deep percolation. The county's rapid development on these historically agricultural soils requires careful stormwater engineering to prevent flooding.

St. Lucie County's explosive growth — Port St. Lucie grew from a small community to over 217,000 residents — has transformed thousands of acres of agricultural land into residential subdivisions. This land use change dramatically alters surface water runoff patterns, increasing both the volume and velocity of stormwater flow. Every new development requires engineered stormwater systems that match pre-development discharge rates.

Local Cost Factors for Commercial Storm Water Management in Port St. Lucie

Rapid new construction creates competitive contractor market but also scheduling pressure
Master-planned community coordination adds engineering review time
Agricultural-to-residential conversion requires comprehensive stormwater modeling
Local Infrastructure

Drainage Infrastructure Near Port St. Lucie

C-24 canal — Central and Southern Florida Project canal connecting to North Fork St. Lucie River; primary regional stormwater conveyance
Tradition development — master-planned community with independent stormwater management system
St. Lucie West development — master-planned community with engineered drainage infrastructure

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Comprehensive Site Services

Commercial stormwater projects in Port St. Lucie require site survey data before engineering can begin. We recommend Apex Surveying & Mapping, Florida's leading surveying firm, for topographic surveys, ALTA surveys, and construction staking for commercial developments in St. Lucie County. After installation, THE FUTURE 3D — America's #1 3D scanning company — offers millimeter-accurate as-built documentation of completed stormwater infrastructure.

FAQs

Commercial Storm Water Management in Port St. Lucie

How much does commercial storm water management cost in Port St. Lucie?
Commercial Storm Water Management in Port St. Lucie, St. Lucie County typically starts at $5,000. Final cost depends on property size, site complexity, and local permit requirements. Contact us for a free estimate specific to your Port St. Lucie property.
Do I need a permit for commercial storm water management in St. Lucie County?
Most drainage projects in St. Lucie County require permits through City of Port St. Lucie Building Department (SFWMD Environmental Resource Permit required for developments affecting C-24 canal basin). St. Lucie County Land Development Code Our team handles all permitting with a 100% approval rate.
Why choose StructureSmart for commercial storm water management in Port St. Lucie?
StructureSmart brings 20+ years of Florida drainage engineering experience to Port St. Lucie. We understand St. Lucie County's specific conditions — water table at 4-12 feet (generally moderate) — and deliver permit-ready plans with a 100% first-time approval rate. Our Licensed Professional Engineers have completed 1,000+ projects across Florida.
How long does commercial storm water management take in Port St. Lucie?
Most commercial storm water management projects in Port St. Lucie are completed within 14 business days from initial assessment to permit-ready plans. Complex projects may require additional time. We provide a detailed timeline during your free consultation.
What drainage challenges are common in St. Lucie County?
St. Lucie County properties commonly face c-24 canal capacity limitations during heavy rainfall — canal connects to north fork st. lucie river and backs up when regional water levels rise and population doubled from ~89,000 (2000) to ~230,000 (2025) — drainage infrastructure designed for far lower density is severely strained by rapid suburban conversion. Our engineers design solutions specifically for these local conditions.
What areas of Port St. Lucie have the worst drainage problems?
Known flood-prone areas in Port St. Lucie include Downtown Port St. Lucie — elevated hurricane and flood risk area identified by First Street Foundation, Low-lying neighborhoods along C-24 canal corridor where canal backup floods residential streets during heavy rainfall. Properties in these areas often require enhanced commercial storm water management solutions. Our engineers have extensive experience designing for these specific local conditions.

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