
Fort Pierce Deck & Fence builds pressure-treated decks, composite decks, wood and vinyl fences, pool decks, screened porches, and covered patios for homeowners throughout Indiantown and western Martin County. We have served this region since 2017, we understand rural property conditions including homes on well and septic systems, and we manage all Village of Indiantown building permits from application through final inspection.

Indiantown sits near Lake Okeechobee and the St. Lucie Canal, which means the water table is high and soil stays saturated for extended periods during the June-through-September rainy season. Pressure-treated lumber rated for ground contact is the right starting point for any deck in this environment - it handles the wet-dry cycling that South Florida imposes on exterior wood without the upfront cost of composite. See how we approach pressure-treated wood deck construction so you know what material choices and specifications we use on projects in this kind of environment.
Many Indiantown properties sit on larger lots with more linear feet of fence line than a typical suburban lot, and homeowners here often need fencing that defines a boundary between the yard and adjacent agricultural land or separates a working area from a living space. Wood privacy fencing in this part of Martin County needs to be spec'd for post depth and concrete footings that account for the high water table - posts that sit in saturated soil without proper footing work fail faster than anyone expects, especially on properties that stay wet for months during rainy season.
For Indiantown homeowners who want a fence that holds up with minimal ongoing maintenance, vinyl is a strong option - particularly on properties near the canal or in low-lying areas where soil moisture is consistently high. Vinyl does not rot, does not need painting, and is not affected by the ground moisture that shortens the lifespan of wood fence posts in this area. It is a practical choice for boundary fencing on larger rural lots where you do not want to paint or treat a fence on a four-year cycle.
Indiantown summers are intense - low-to-mid-90s temperatures and daily afternoon thunderstorms from June through September make an uncovered outdoor space genuinely uncomfortable during the hottest part of the day. A covered deck or insulated panel patio structure extends the hours your outdoor space is usable and protects the deck surface, furniture, and any grill or outdoor kitchen equipment from the UV exposure and moisture cycling that South Florida's climate imposes on anything left outside year-round.
Rural western Martin County has a more significant insect presence than coastal cities - mosquitoes, no-see-ums, and biting flies are common from late spring through fall, particularly on properties near canals, retention areas, or standing water. An unscreened back porch in Indiantown is often unusable in the evenings during summer months. A well-built screen enclosure changes how you use your outdoor space for most of the year, and it can be combined with a roof structure or patio cover for a more protected room-like feel.
Much of Indiantown's housing was built between the 1960s and 1990s, and decks on homes from that period are now at the age where the framing and hardware have been through enough South Florida rainy seasons that serious wear is common. High soil moisture in this area accelerates rot at post bases and joist ends - parts of the structure you cannot see from the surface. If your deck feels springy or you can see rust staining around hardware, it is worth having the framing evaluated before the problem shows up as a structural failure.
Indiantown is in the western, more rural part of Martin County, a few miles north of Lake Okeechobee and crossed by the St. Lucie Canal. The water table here is high, and the ground is often saturated for extended stretches during the June-through-September wet season - conditions that are genuinely different from what you find on the coast or in newer suburban developments. Any contractor building a deck or fence in this area needs to account for post depth, footing design, and drainage in ways that are not necessary on a well-drained suburban lot. Standard post installations that work fine in drier soil will fail faster at the ground line in consistently wet conditions. The high moisture content also means wood structures are more vulnerable to fungal decay at connections and end-grain exposure than they would be in a lower-humidity environment.
A meaningful share of Indiantown's housing stock includes mobile and manufactured homes alongside site-built concrete block construction, and a number of properties have well water and septic systems rather than municipal connections. Any contractor doing excavation, post-setting, or concrete work on these properties needs to know where the well and septic are located before starting - it is a basic step in rural Martin County that should never be skipped. The community became an incorporated municipality in 2017, which means the permit process now runs through the Village of Indiantown Building Department rather than Martin County directly. We are familiar with the Indiantown permit process and pull permits there regularly, which matters when you are waiting for an inspector sign-off to complete your project.
Our crew works throughout Indiantown regularly, pulling permits through the Village of Indiantown Building Department and working on properties that range from modest site-built homes near the center of town to larger rural parcels on the outskirts. We always ask about well and septic locations before any excavation or post-setting work - it is standard practice on rural Martin County properties, and homeowners here expect contractors to ask.
The Seminole Inn on Warfield Boulevard is one of the most recognizable landmarks in Indiantown - it has been standing since 1926 and gives you a good sense of how long this community has been here. The Indiantown Marina on the St. Lucie Canal is another anchor point; the canal itself is visible from many parts of town, and properties near the water deal with elevated soil moisture and occasional flooding after heavy rain. The annual Indiantown Rodeo reflects the agricultural roots of this community - this is a working town with long-term residents who take care of their properties and want contractors who show up on time and do what they say they will do.
We also serve Fort Pierce to the northeast and Hobe Sound to the south - if you have neighbors or family in either area who need work done, we know both communities and can coordinate visits on the same trip out.
Call (772) 264-9801 or use the contact form on this site. We respond to all Indiantown inquiries within one business day and can typically schedule a site visit within a few days of your first contact.
We visit the property, note any conditions that affect the project - drainage, soil type, well and septic locations, existing structures - and provide a detailed written estimate. Cost is addressed directly here: you receive a fixed number before any commitment, and we explain what is driving that number so there are no surprises later.
Once you approve the estimate, we submit the permit application to the Village of Indiantown Building Department. Standard permits typically take one to three weeks. We schedule crew and materials around the permit approval timeline and give you a realistic construction start date.
We complete the work, coordinate the building inspection, and confirm the permit is closed out. You do not need to be present during construction, but we walk through the finished project with you before we leave and answer any questions about care and maintenance.
We know Indiantown and western Martin County. Call or submit the form below and we will get back to you within one business day with a clear path forward.
(772) 264-9801Indiantown is a small municipality in western Martin County with a population of about 6,500 people. It incorporated as a village in 2017 after a long history as an unincorporated rural community. The area is surrounded by working farms, citrus groves, and cattle operations, and that agricultural character is still central to the community's identity - the annual Indiantown Rodeo draws crowds from across the region. The Seminole Inn on Warfield Boulevard, built in 1926, is the oldest and most recognizable landmark in town and a reminder of how long this community has been rooted here. You can read more about the area on the Indiantown Wikipedia page or visit the official Village of Indiantown website.
The housing stock is a mix of modest site-built single-family homes, many constructed between the 1960s and 1990s, and manufactured housing that is common in rural Florida communities. Lots tend to be larger than suburban properties, and many homes sit on private well and septic systems. The St. Lucie Canal passes through town and connects to Lake Okeechobee just to the south - that waterway is a gathering point for the boating community and a recognizable part of Indiantown's geography. Nearby Hobe Sound is the closest coastal community to the east, and our crew regularly serves both areas.
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Learn MoreWe serve Indiantown and western Martin County. Call today or fill out the form and we will respond within one business day.