Welcome to Florida Newcode

We offer the most professional hurricane protection for your home or commercial property in South Florida. Read more

Commercial Storm Protection

We provide complex, large-scale installations for high-rise condominiums, office buildings, storefronts, and other commercial properties. Read more

Residential Storm Protection

Get rapid, factory-direct installation for your residence. No payment until installation. Rapid permit applications, free estimates. Read more.

Professional, Affordable Hurricane Protection for Your Home

For over 15 years, Florida NewCode Hurricane Shutters has installed hurricane shutters on thousands of homes and commercial properties in South Florida. All of our hurricane shutters are engineer-certified to meet Florida's stringent building codes pertaining.

Florida Newcode offers competitive prices, professional installation, and complete permit application services. FACTORY-DIRECT INSTALLATION - NO PAYMENT UNTIL INSTALLATION.

Contact us now for a free estimate on quality hurricane shutters from Florida Newcode Hurricane Shutters.

Accordions that blend into the decor of your home

Hurricane shutters don't need to be a sore spot on your beautiful home. Get accordion shutters that are easy to close and blend into the decor of your home.

Attractive balcony installations

Need to enclose your balcony with accordions? No problem! We handle balcony enclosures.

Hi-rise shutter installations

Need protection for your hi-rise condo? We specialize in very complicated hi-rise installations. One unit, two units, or an entire building - Florida Newcode Hurricane Shutters has the expertise you need.

Convenient, safe accordion shutters

Perhaps you purchased a new home only to discover a load of storm panels taking up space in your new garage. Accordion shutters are easy and safe to close up when a hurricane threat looms. No need to install heavy panels. When you buy Florida Newcode accordion shutters, we'll give you a credit for your storm panels!

2008 hurricane season: Above average season

According to Floridatoday.com, despite two consecutive years of missing the mark, a research team at Colorado State University again foresees an above average hurricane season for 2008.

William Gray's team expects 13 named storms, seven of them hurricanes — and three of those Category 3 or greater. Category 3 on the Saffir/Simpson scale is a storm with sustained winds of 111 mph or greater.

In the just-concluded 2007 season, there were 14 named storms, six of them hurricanes and two of Category 3 or greater.

The Atlantic basin hurricane season runs June 1 and Nov. 30.

15 years later, Andrew remains a terror to South Florida

Andrew. Around these parts, no need to put "hurricane" in front of it. We know the name refers to the most destructive storm ever to hit the Gold Coast's tri-county area, wreaking most of its wrath on Miami-Dade County. It happened 15 years ago today.

Millions of people throughout South Florida still vividly remember the horrific early morning hours of Aug. 24, 1992. Compact and destructive as a buzz-saw, Andrew slashed ashore near Homestead with sustained winds of 165 mph, and gusts topping 200 mph.

Read more on the Sun-Sentinel Hurricane Headquarters website

Senators question how $151m hurricane plan went wrong

(Source: Sun-Sentinel) Florida's golden reputation for its sure-handed hurricane response in 2004 may be tarnished a bit. In a rush to gird the state for future storms, the Legislature devoted $151 million in state and federal funds last year to buy giant generators for special-needs hurricane shelters, open a central warehouse in Orlando that could quickly ship out supplies and "harden" local emergency centers.

Nationally, it was an unprecedented feat for a state to attempt. But nearly 18 months later:

* Most of the 52 generators are sitting in an Ocala warehouse -- because the Florida Division of Emergency Management needs another $51.5 million to install them.

Read more on the Sun-Sentinel Hurricane Headquarters website

As 2007 Atlantic Hurricane Season Ends, Questions Remain

As the 2007 Atlantic hurricane season officially came to a close on November 30, NOAA scientists are carefully reviewing a set of dynamic weather patterns that yielded lower-than-expected hurricane activity across the Atlantic Basin. As a result, the United States was largely spared from significant landfalling storms. However several noteworthy events took place, including two back-to-back Category 5 hurricanes hitting Central America and the rapid near-shore intensification of the single U.S. landfalling hurricane. Read more on the National Hurricane Center website.

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