Project Planning

Marine & Coastal
Planning Guide

For dock railings, coastal gates, seawall hardware, and near-water metalwork in South Florida. The planning decisions that matter most here are about material and finish -- not design.

Why Marine and Coastal Projects Are Different

Salt air, UV exposure, humidity, and direct water contact are the four forces that determine how long metal lasts in a coastal South Florida environment. The wrong material choice or finish system does not just look bad faster -- it fails structurally in conditions where failure is a safety issue.

A dock railing that rusts through in three years because it was built with carbon steel and standard powder coat is not a cosmetic problem. It is a liability. Planning a coastal project starts with taking the environment seriously.

Material Selection for Coastal Environments

These are the primary material choices for marine and coastal metalwork, ranked from most to least suitable for direct saltwater exposure.

The rule of thumb: If the installation is on or near the water -- dock, seawall, pool fence at a waterfront property, outdoor railing within a quarter mile of saltwater -- specify 316 stainless or marine-grade aluminum. The upfront cost difference is real. The cost of replacing the system in three to five years is larger.

Common Marine and Coastal Fabrication Scopes

Site Information for Marine Projects

For accurate quoting on marine and coastal work, the most useful information to gather in advance:

Planning a Marine or Coastal Project?

Share the site location, photos, and scope. Fine Edge will specify the right material and finish system for the conditions -- not just the cheapest option.

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