Trade — Concrete & Shell

Concrete & Shell Subcontractor Agreements in Florida

Concrete contracts need PSI, reinforcement spec, and pour-day weather contingency. In Florida shell work, add HVHZ wind-load and inspection coordination. 'Pour the slab' without a PSI is a structural dispute waiting to crack.

The clauses that cause concrete & shell disputes

XOsign checks for each of these when you turn a photo into a contract — and flags the ones that are missing before you send.

  • Missing PSI (concrete strength) specification.
  • Unclear reinforcement spec (rebar size/spacing, mesh).
  • Missing inspection coordination (structural, building department).
  • Missing weather / pour-day contingency.
  • No HVHZ wind-load reference for Florida shell work.

Frequently asked questions

What should a concrete contract specify?

The concrete mix design (PSI / strength), reinforcement (rebar size and spacing, or mesh), finish type, curing method, and pour-day weather contingency. In Florida shell work, also reference the HVHZ wind-load requirements and inspection coordination. A missing PSI spec is the most common concrete dispute.

XOsign is an information platform, not a law firm, and does not provide legal advice. Trade practices vary; consult a Florida construction attorney for your specific situation.

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Concrete & Shell Subcontractor Agreement (Florida) — The Clauses That Cause Disputes · XOsign