BOYNTON BEACH FL — LARGE LOSS & CATASTROPHE RESPONSE
Large Loss Handling in Boynton Beach, Florida
Hunters Run's 2,860 units across 23 sub-communities. Aberdeen's 2,400+ units spanning a massive community footprint. 8,703 properties at measurable flood risk. When a single hurricane event can generate hundreds of simultaneous claims across Boynton Beach's densely packed master-planned communities, you need a restoration company with the crew depth, mobile command infrastructure, and multi-carrier insurance coordination to operate at catastrophe scale. Palm Build deploys 5+ crews simultaneously from our Deerfield Beach hub with pre-positioned equipment, emergency contracts, and the project management capability Boynton Beach's largest losses demand.
Deerfield Beach — 20 Minutes from Boynton Beach 30-45 min Response IICRC Certified
When Hurricane Damage Hits 2,860 Units at Hunters Run
Hurricane-force winds and 10 inches of rain hit Boynton Beach. Across Hunters Run's
2,860 units, hundreds of roofs are compromised. Water is pouring into condos
throughout the community. The HOA board needs a single restoration partner who can
deploy at scale — not one truck, but 10 crews simultaneously. Aberdeen's 2,400+ units
report similar damage. Leisureville's 1,800+ units — with 1960s-era roofing — are the
worst hit. Three of Boynton Beach's largest communities need catastrophe-scale
response at the same time. This is not a job for a company with three crews and a
pickup truck. This is a large loss event that requires pre-built infrastructure, surge
staffing, and the logistics to sustain operations across weeks.
24/7 catastrophe response for Boynton Beach communities and commercial properties
What Defines Large Loss
Why Boynton Beach Produces Large Loss Events at Scale
Boynton Beach's combination of massive HOA communities (8,000+ units across the top
three alone), aging 1960s-1990s building stock, LWDD canal flood risk affecting 42.2% of
properties, and direct hurricane exposure creates a large loss risk profile that exceeds
most cities in Palm Beach County. When catastrophe strikes, the damage is measured in
hundreds of thousands — not tens of thousands. The restoration company you choose
determines whether recovery takes months or years.
Claims Exceeding $100,000
$100K+
Claim threshold
Boynton Beach's large HOA communities and aging building stock produce six-figure claims regularly. A poly plumbing failure cascade at Hunters Run that affects 5-10 units generates $100,000-$300,000 in combined damage. A roof failure at Leisureville — with 1960s construction and original roofing — can produce $200,000+ in structural and water damage across multiple attached units. These are not standard restoration projects — they require dedicated project management, multi-carrier insurance coordination, and the equipment depth to sustain operations across weeks.
Multi-Building Community Events
8,703
Flood-risk properties in BB
With Hunters Run (2,860 units), Aberdeen (2,400+), and Leisureville (1,800+), Boynton Beach has communities where a single event — hurricane, catastrophic plumbing failure, or flooding — can affect dozens to hundreds of buildings simultaneously. Each building involves separate units, separate insurance policies (master + HO-6), and separate scoping. Managing 50-200+ simultaneous unit restorations within a single community requires command-center-level project coordination.
LWDD Canal & Flood Risk
42.2%
Properties at flood risk
Boynton Beach's Lake Worth Drainage District (LWDD) canal system creates flood risk that most residents underestimate. With 42.2% of properties at flood risk — 8,703 properties — and a canal network that can overwhelm during heavy rain events, neighborhood-wide flooding is not a theoretical scenario. When canals overtop or drainage systems fail during South Florida's wet season, entire blocks can sustain simultaneous water damage, creating mass-loss events that require catastrophe-scale response.
Hurricane & Catastrophe Events
2,860+
Units in largest community
Boynton Beach sits in Palm Beach County's hurricane exposure zone. Hurricane Dorian (2019), Nicole (2022), and Tropical Storm Philippe (2023) each generated large-loss scenarios across Boynton Beach's communities. With communities of 2,800+ units concentrated in 1960s-1990s CBS construction, a direct hurricane hit would create thousands of simultaneous claims. The combination of aging roofs, poly plumbing, and high community density makes Boynton Beach one of the highest large-loss-probability cities in Palm Beach County.
Boynton Beach Storm History
Recent Hurricane Events That Generated Large Loss Scenarios
Boynton Beach has experienced multiple hurricane and tropical storm events in recent
years — each exposing vulnerabilities in the city's aging community infrastructure. With
42.2% flood risk, communities of 2,800+ units, and building stock dating to the 1960s, a
direct Category 3+ hit would create one of the largest residential restoration events in
Palm Beach County history. Palm Build pre-positions equipment, maintains emergency
contracts with HOA communities, and deploys 5+ crews for large-scale events.
Hurricane Dorian (2019)
Near-miss exposure
Category 5 hurricane that tracked dangerously close to Palm Beach County's coast. While the eye stayed offshore, Boynton Beach experienced tropical storm-force winds, heavy rain, and storm surge that exposed vulnerabilities in older communities. Hunters Run and Leisureville reported roof damage, water intrusion, and plumbing stress from pressure fluctuations. Dorian was a near-miss that generated significant damage claims — and a preview of what a direct hit would produce.
Hurricane Nicole (2022)
Direct impact
Nicole made landfall as a Category 1 hurricane on Florida's east coast — an unusual track that brought tropical storm conditions directly through Palm Beach County. Boynton Beach communities sustained wind damage to roofs, screen enclosures, and building envelopes, followed by prolonged rain that exploited every compromised opening. Older communities with deferred roof maintenance suffered the worst water intrusion.
Tropical Storm Philippe (2023)
Flood exposure
Philippe's outer bands delivered heavy rainfall across Boynton Beach — exposing drainage infrastructure limitations in communities built before modern stormwater management standards. LWDD canal levels rose rapidly, and communities near canal banks experienced water intrusion that preceded any structural failure. This event demonstrated that Boynton Beach's large-loss triggers aren't limited to major hurricanes.
Catastrophe-Scale Response
How Palm Build Scales for Mass-Loss Events in Boynton Beach
Boynton Beach's massive HOA communities produce mass-loss events — hurricanes, flooding,
and plumbing cascades — that overwhelm standard-capacity restoration companies within
hours. Responding to 50, 100, or 500+ affected units simultaneously requires pre-built
catastrophe infrastructure, not improvisation. Here is what Palm Build brings when the
scale exceeds what normal operations can handle.
Multi-Crew Deployment (5+ Simultaneous)
When Boynton Beach communities need simultaneous restoration across dozens of units, Palm Build deploys 5+ crews operating in coordinated shifts. Our Deerfield Beach hub provides the local base — under 25 minutes from any Boynton Beach community — while our Charlotte, NC operations center provides surge staffing within 24-48 hours. This dual-state workforce model means we can double our manpower in a disaster zone. For communities like Hunters Run where a single event can affect hundreds of units simultaneously, this crew depth is the difference between responding in days and responding in weeks.
Mobile Command Center Operations
During community-wide Boynton Beach events, Palm Build activates command center operations that coordinate all active projects from a centralized hub. Project managers track crew deployment, equipment allocation, material logistics, and insurance documentation across dozens of simultaneous unit restorations. Daily situation reports provide every affected property owner and HOA board with their project status, next-day plan, and updated timeline. This level of coordinated project management prevents the chaos that occurs when a restoration company tries to manage 50+ active projects with standard scheduling systems.
Pre-Loaded Equipment Trailer Banks
A mass-loss event doesn't fail because of manpower alone — it fails because of equipment constraints. When hundreds of units sustain water damage simultaneously, the demand for dehumidifiers, air movers, truck-mounted extractors, and specialty drying systems exceeds every local supplier's inventory within hours. Palm Build maintains pre-loaded equipment trailer banks — maintained, inventoried, and deployment-ready — that allow us to scale drying and extraction capacity from a single home to an entire Boynton Beach community within 48 hours.
Staggered Crew Scheduling (24/7 Coverage)
Mass-loss events in Boynton Beach communities require continuous operations. We schedule crews in staggered shifts to maintain 24/7 extraction and drying coverage across all affected buildings. Night shifts focus on equipment monitoring, rotation, and moisture readings. Day shifts handle demolition, remediation, and resident coordination. This approach cuts total project timelines by 30-40% compared to standard-hours-only operations — critical when 55+ community residents need their homes safe as quickly as possible.
Per-Building Project Management
Each building or cluster of units within a Boynton Beach community receives its own project manager who owns the scope, timeline, and resident communication for that section. At Hunters Run's scale (23 sub-communities), a dedicated HOA liaison coordinates with the board and property management at the community level while individual project managers handle their assigned buildings. This structure prevents the coordination breakdown that occurs when one person tries to oversee 50+ simultaneous restorations.
Emergency HOA Contracts (Pre-Negotiated)
Palm Build offers pre-negotiated emergency response contracts for Boynton Beach HOA communities — providing guaranteed response times, pre-approved pricing, and documented protocols before a catastrophe occurs. When a hurricane hits and the board needs to mobilize restoration immediately, there is no vendor selection delay, no emergency meeting to approve pricing, and no scramble to find a qualified contractor. The contract is already signed. The crews deploy immediately.
Retirement Community Scale
When Thousands of Senior Residents Need Help at Once
Boynton Beach's largest retirement communities aren't neighborhoods — they're small
cities. Hunters Run alone has 2,860 units across 23 sub-communities. A single hurricane
event can generate hundreds of simultaneous damage claims, overwhelming any
standard-capacity restoration company. These communities serve primarily retired
residents — many with health vulnerabilities that make rapid environmental restoration
critical. Mold exposure, poor air quality, and displacement stress are serious health
risks for seniors with respiratory conditions.
Hunters Run
2,860 units
1970s-1980s23 sub-communities
The largest single community in Boynton Beach. Aging polybutylene plumbing, flat roof condos approaching 50 years, galvanized supply lines at end-of-life, and 23 separate sub-association governing documents with different insurance structures. A single hurricane event here generates hundreds of simultaneous claims — each requiring individual unit documentation while the master policy covers common elements.
Large 55+ population with respiratory sensitivities, mobility limitations, and medical equipment dependence
Aberdeen Golf & Country Club
2,400+ units
1980s-1990sGated country club
Gated community with condos, villas, and single-family homes. CBS construction with barrel tile and flat roofs. Canal-adjacent sections face LWDD flood risk. Multiple sub-associations mean different insurance structures within the same gated community. A community-wide event requires coordination across sub-association boundaries.
Retirement-age residents with accumulated decades of personal property and irreplaceable belongings
Leisureville
1,800+ units
1960s-1970s55+ community
Oldest residential stock in Boynton Beach — original galvanized plumbing, cast iron drain lines, and 1960s-era CBS construction predating modern hurricane code. Highest catastrophic failure risk of any Boynton Beach community. When pipes fail here, they fail throughout the system. Original roofing systems have been replaced but underlying structural components show their age during high-wind events.
Many residents on fixed incomes; medical equipment (oxygen, CPAP) requires immediate power restoration
Indian Spring
Gated community
1980sGated country club
Gated 1980s community approaching the 40+ year mark where plumbing systems, HVAC units, and roofing materials all converge on replacement timelines simultaneously. Poly plumbing risk in portions of the community. Deferred maintenance at the community level compounds individual unit vulnerability during storm events.
Aging-in-place residents who may require relocation assistance during extended restoration
Hunters Run: 2,860 units across 23 sub-communities — a single hurricane event here is
a large-loss scenario by any definition.
Senior Health Is Part of the Restoration Scope
For Boynton Beach's 55+ communities, restoration isn't just about property — it's
about health. Palm Build prioritizes air quality testing, mold prevention, and rapid
environmental stabilization because our clients' health depends on it. We coordinate
with home health providers for medical equipment replacement and provide extra
communication to families who may be monitoring from out of state.
Relocation Assistance When Needed
When unit restoration requires temporary relocation, Palm Build coordinates with
property management to identify available units within the same community, arrange
temporary housing, and ensure residents' medical equipment and essential items are
transported safely. We understand that relocating a 75-year-old from their home of 20
years requires more care than handing them a hotel voucher.
Large Loss Timeline
7 Steps to Large-Loss Recovery in Boynton Beach
Large loss restoration follows a structured seven-phase approach that balances urgency
with thoroughness — from emergency mobilization through community-wide closeout. Here is
the timeline our South Florida team follows for projects involving multiple buildings or
units.
Step 01Hours 0-4
Mobilization & Command Center Setup
Multiple crews dispatched from our Deerfield Beach hub — under 25 minutes to any Boynton Beach community. Mobile command center deployed on-site at the affected community. Communication established with HOA board president, property management, and local authorities. Initial triage team assesses scope while extraction crews begin emergency mitigation in the most severely affected areas.
Step 02Hours 4-48
Rapid Damage Assessment (All Buildings)
Systematic assessment of every building and unit in the affected area — not just the ones with visible damage. In Boynton Beach CBS construction, water migrates through shared walls and floor assemblies to adjacent units. Thermal imaging, moisture mapping, and room-by-room photography document every affected space. For communities like Hunters Run with 23 sub-communities, assessment teams work building-by-building with property management coordinating access.
Step 03Days 1-3
Priority Triage (Health & Safety First)
Life safety issues receive immediate priority. Emergency tarping for compromised roofs, water shutoffs for active plumbing failures, electrical isolation in flooded areas, and environmental stabilization for the most severely affected units. In Boynton Beach's 55+ communities, vulnerable residents — elderly, health-compromised, oxygen-dependent — are identified and their units prioritized. Medical equipment protection and relocation assistance provided.
Step 04Days 3-30+
Phased Restoration by Building/Unit
Building-by-building, unit-by-unit restoration work. Staggered equipment deployment maximizes drying efficiency across shared wall assemblies. Crews rotate between extraction, demolition, remediation, and reconstruction phases. For 55+ communities, restoration schedules account for resident health needs, medical equipment access, and the physical limitations that make extended displacement particularly burdensome for senior residents.
Step 05Ongoing
Multi-Carrier Insurance Coordination
Unified Xactimate documentation serves HOA master policy AND individual unit owner HO-6 policies simultaneously. Each unit receives its own scope, moisture map, photo documentation, and cost estimate. Common area damage is scoped separately for the master policy carrier. For community-wide events involving 50-200+ units, this means managing relationships with potentially 10+ different insurance carriers — each with different documentation requirements, adjustment timelines, and approval processes.
Step 06Ongoing
Daily Progress Reporting to HOA/Management
Property managers receive daily status updates organized by building. HOA boards receive weekly summary reports with photos, completion percentages, and timeline updates. Individual unit owners are contacted directly with their unit's restoration timeline and next steps. For communities with seasonal or out-of-state unit owners, our communication system provides remote access to project status, photos, and documents.
Step 07Final Phase
Demobilization & Closeout
Final inspections and clearance testing for every restored unit. Equipment removal coordinated to minimize disruption to occupied areas. Complete documentation package delivered to HOA board and all insurance carriers — master policy closeout, individual unit claim packages, and final cost reconciliation. Community walkthrough with board representatives. Warranty documentation provided for all work performed.
Boynton Beach large loss insurance claims involve multiple carriers, HOA master-vs-unit
policy disputes, named-storm deductible assessments, and the complexity of producing
individual documentation for 50-200+ affected units while maintaining a unified project.
Here is what makes Boynton Beach large loss claims uniquely challenging — and how Palm
Build navigates the complexity.
Multiple Carriers on the Same Event
Boynton Beach large loss events routinely involve multiple insurance carriers on a single community event. A hurricane hitting Hunters Run triggers the HOA master policy (covering roofs, exterior walls, common areas), individual HO-6 unit owner policies from different private carriers for each affected unit, and potentially NFIP flood insurance for ground-level units. A 50-unit event can involve 5-10 different insurance carriers — each with different documentation requirements, adjustment timelines, and approval processes. Palm Build prepares carrier-specific documentation packages while maintaining a unified project scope.
HOA Master Policy vs. HO-6 Coordination
Florida Statute 718 defines the boundary between master policy and individual unit policy coverage — but in practice, this boundary creates constant disputes during large loss events. The master policy covers common elements and the structure. HO-6 policies cover unit interior and personal property. In Boynton Beach communities spanning six decades of construction — from Leisureville's 1960s buildings to Valencia Bay's 2010s homes — determining what constitutes 'common element' vs. 'unit' varies by declaration and by era. When 50+ units are damaged simultaneously, this determination must be made for each unit individually.
Named-Storm Deductibles & Special Assessments
HOA master policies in Florida typically carry named-storm deductibles of 2-5% of total insured value. For a community like Hunters Run with hundreds of millions in insured value, a named-storm deductible can exceed $500,000-$1,000,000. This amount is assessed back to unit owners through special assessments — often funded through individual HO-6 loss assessment coverage. Palm Build documents all damage clearly delineating named-storm from non-named-storm damage, maximizing coverage and minimizing special assessment exposure for unit owners.
Multi-Unit Xactimate Scoping at Scale
Large loss documentation in Boynton Beach goes far beyond standard photography. Each unit receives its own Xactimate scope with line-item estimates, moisture mapping, and photo documentation. Common area damage is scoped separately for the master policy. When 50-200 units are affected, this means producing 50-200 individual unit scopes plus building-level and community-level summaries — all from a single consistent source of data. Palm Build's documentation system produces unit-level, building-level, and community-level reports from one unified dataset.
Florida 1-Year Filing Deadline
Florida law requires that property insurance claims be filed within one year of the loss event. For large loss community events where restoration stretches across months, proper documentation of all damage within the filing window is critical. Supplemental claims for concealed damage discovered during restoration must be documented and filed before the deadline. Palm Build tracks filing deadlines for every unit in a community-wide event and ensures no claim lapses due to missed statutory timelines.
Unified Documentation, Separate Claims
The fundamental challenge of large loss insurance in Boynton Beach's condo communities is maintaining unified project management while producing separate documentation for every insurance relationship. Palm Build provides: one Xactimate scope per unit (for individual HO-6 claims), consolidated building summaries (for master policy claims), community-wide progress reports (for HOA boards), and carrier-specific documentation packages formatted to each carrier's requirements — all from a single source of truth.
The Palm Build Difference
Why Boynton Beach Property Owners Choose Palm Build for Large Loss
Large loss events in Boynton Beach expose the difference between restoration companies
built for catastrophe scale and those that are not. When your project spans multiple
buildings, involves hundreds of units, or requires multi-carrier coordination across a
community of 2,860 units, the company you choose determines whether recovery takes
months or years.
5+ Simultaneous Crew Deployment
We don't send one truck to a 2,860-unit community. Palm Build deploys multiple fully equipped crews from our South Florida hub — each capable of independent operation while coordinating through our mobile command center. Our equipment trailer banks, dual-state workforce (Deerfield Beach + Charlotte), and scalable project management system allow us to ramp from a single-unit project to a 100+ unit catastrophe response without sacrificing quality or documentation standards.
Dual-State Infrastructure
Our Deerfield Beach hub is under 25 minutes from Boynton Beach, providing rapid initial response. Our Charlotte, NC operations provide surge capacity that no single-state competitor can match. When Boynton Beach faces a hurricane, Charlotte crews deploy south with additional equipment and manpower. This dual-state model provides workforce redundancy, diversity of expertise, and supply chain depth from two independent sourcing markets when South Florida materials are depleted after a storm.
2,860-Unit Community Experience
Boynton Beach's massive HOA communities create the most complex multi-party restoration scenarios in Palm Beach County. Palm Build has managed restoration projects in Boynton Beach's largest communities — we understand the logistics of 23 sub-community coordination, the insurance complexity of master-vs-HO-6 claims across hundreds of units, and the unique needs of 55+ residents during extended restoration projects.
Pre-Storm Emergency Contracts
Boynton Beach HOA communities can pre-negotiate emergency response contracts with Palm Build — ensuring immediate mobilization without board meeting delays when a hurricane strikes. The contract is already signed, pricing is pre-approved, and protocols are documented. When the storm hits, there is no vendor selection process, no emergency board meeting to authorize spending, and no scramble to find a qualified contractor. Crews deploy immediately.
Multi-Carrier Documentation at Scale
Unified Xactimate documentation that serves HOA master policies, individual HO-6 policies, and commercial policies simultaneously. One scope per unit, consolidated per building, summarized per community — all from a single source of truth. We manage relationships with 5-10+ carriers per community event, producing carrier-specific documentation packages while maintaining project-wide consistency.
24/7 Project Management
Dedicated project manager assigned to every large-loss event with round-the-clock availability for property managers, board members, and unit owners. Weekly progress meetings with all stakeholders. Per-building sub-managers for community-wide events. Daily situation reports that keep everyone informed without creating communication chaos. This is not one person trying to manage 50 units — it is a structured management team scaled to the project.
Common Questions
Boynton Beach Large Loss FAQ
What qualifies as a 'large loss' in Boynton Beach?
In Boynton Beach, large loss generally means any restoration project exceeding $100,000, affecting multiple structures or units simultaneously, requiring more than 10 crew members, or involving complex multi-party insurance coordination. Boynton Beach examples include post-hurricane damage across Hunters Run's 2,860 units or Aberdeen's 2,400+ units, multi-floor cascading water events in condominium buildings, strip mall or multi-story office building catastrophes, and community-wide storm damage requiring simultaneous restoration across dozens of structures sharing common infrastructure and drainage systems.
How does Palm Build handle multi-building hurricane events in Boynton Beach?
We deploy a mobile command center to establish on-site coordination for events spanning multiple buildings or sub-communities. From this central operations point, we direct 5+ crews simultaneously across affected structures, manage unit-by-unit scoping and documentation, coordinate with HOA boards and property management companies, and interface with multiple insurance carriers. For community-scale events like a hurricane striking Hunters Run's 23 sub-communities, our project managers create phased restoration plans that prioritize structural stabilization, then systematic drying and remediation building by building.
What is Palm Build's hurricane response capacity for Boynton Beach?
Our Deerfield Beach hub maintains pre-positioned equipment specifically for Palm Beach County catastrophe events — pre-loaded equipment trailers, surge staffing protocols, and supply chain partnerships for bulk material availability. When a hurricane targets Boynton Beach, we activate our catastrophe response protocol before landfall: equipment is staged, crews are on standby, and emergency contracts are confirmed. Post-storm, we scale from 5 active crews to 50+ within 48 hours by activating our Charlotte, NC operations center and mutual aid agreements across the Southeast. During Helene and Milton in 2024, when Boynton Beach ran out of sandbags and initiated pre-emptive canal pumping, our team was already in deployment posture.
How does multi-party insurance work for large condo losses in Boynton Beach?
Condo large losses in Boynton Beach involve layered insurance complexity. The HOA or condo association carries a master policy covering common elements, structural components, and shared infrastructure. Individual unit owners carry HO-6 policies covering interior finishes, personal property, and improvements. When a hurricane or water event damages both common elements and individual units simultaneously, restoration requires coordination between the master policy carrier, every affected unit owner's individual carrier, and potentially NFIP flood insurance and FEMA assistance. Palm Build's large loss documentation system generates separate scopes, photo documentation, and Xactimate estimates for each insurance party while maintaining a unified project timeline.
What is the typical timeline for large loss restoration in Boynton Beach?
Large loss timelines in Boynton Beach vary by scope and complexity. Multi-unit condominium water events with cascading damage across floors: 6-12 weeks. Commercial building catastrophes (strip malls, multi-story office buildings): 8-16 weeks. Hurricane-event community restoration across Hunters Run, Aberdeen, or similar master-planned communities: 3-12 months for full recovery. Florida Building Code requirements for hurricane-zone construction add additional timeline for engineering review, permit processing, and wind-load compliance inspections. FEMA-declared events may extend timelines due to federal documentation coordination.
Does Palm Build pre-position equipment for Boynton Beach hurricanes?
Yes. When the National Hurricane Center issues a tropical storm or hurricane watch for Palm Beach County, Palm Build activates pre-positioning protocols from our Deerfield Beach hub. Equipment trailers loaded with truck-mounted extractors, commercial dehumidifier banks, air movers, air scrubbers, and emergency board-up materials are staged for rapid deployment. Fuel reserves are confirmed, generator capacity is verified, and surge crew rosters are activated. This pre-positioning means we are extracting water and stabilizing structures within hours of a storm's passage — not days. The 2024 Helene and Milton events, which forced Boynton Beach into emergency canal pumping and sandbag exhaustion, validated this approach.
How does Palm Build handle commercial large losses in Boynton Beach?
Commercial large losses in Boynton Beach — strip malls along Congress Avenue, multi-story office buildings near Gateway Boulevard, retail centers, and medical facilities — require different coordination than residential events. Commercial properties involve business interruption insurance, tenant relocation logistics, ADA compliance during reconstruction, and often multiple commercial tenants with separate carriers on a single property. Palm Build assigns dedicated commercial project managers who coordinate with property management companies, commercial adjusters, and tenant businesses to minimize downtime while executing full-scope restoration and reconstruction.
How does Palm Build coordinate with multiple insurance carriers on a single Boynton Beach large loss event?
Multi-carrier coordination is the defining challenge of large loss restoration in master-planned communities like Hunters Run and Aberdeen. A single hurricane event can involve the HOA master policy carrier, dozens of individual HO-6 unit owner carriers, NFIP flood insurance, and potentially FEMA Individual Assistance — all with different adjusters, different documentation requirements, and different approval timelines. Palm Build's large loss documentation system is built for this complexity: we generate carrier-specific scopes and estimates, maintain separate photo and moisture documentation packages per insured party, provide daily progress reports formatted for each carrier's requirements, and coordinate inspection schedules so multiple adjusters can review work without delaying the restoration timeline.
Large-Scale Damage in Boynton Beach? Palm Build Has the Capacity.
Palm Build's large loss division deploys 5+ crews simultaneously with mobile command coordination, pre-positioned equipment, and multi-carrier insurance documentation. From Hunters Run to Aberdeen, from condo cascades to commercial catastrophes, we scale with the scope of Boynton Beach's largest restoration events.