Florida Department of Business & Professional Regulation

Every license the state issues
for the trades a GC coordinates.

Most general contractors hold a single license — General — and subcontract the rest. That means someone else’s liability, someone else’s schedule, someone else’s warranty. Aldo Dellamano personally holds all five. Every one is public record on the FL DBPR portal — each card below opens the state search page. Paste the license number to verify.

FL #CGC1525289

Certified General Contractor

The umbrella license that authorizes construction of buildings of unlimited size and height. This is the license that lets Aldo sign your permits and stand behind the entire project.

Look up on FL DBPR →
FL #CCC1335157

Certified Roofing Contractor

Full authority for re-roofs, roof repairs, and new roof systems — residential or commercial. Same owner who signed your GC contract signs your roof warranty.

Look up on FL DBPR →
FL #CMC1251666

Certified Mechanical Contractor

HVAC systems, ductwork, refrigeration, gas piping, and mechanical ventilation. No waiting on a sub to size your equipment — we do it in-house.

Look up on FL DBPR →
FL #CFC1434398

Certified Plumbing Contractor

Rough-in, finish, gas lines, and full water and drain systems for renovations, additions, and new construction. Owner-licensed — no subcontracted plumbing.

Look up on FL DBPR →
FL #EC13015530

Certified Electrical Contractor

Panel upgrades, service changes, EV chargers, code corrections, and full electrical for renovations and new builds. Same in-house license set.

Look up on FL DBPR →
What does “DBPR” mean, in plain English

Every license here is a state credential, not a trade group membership.

The Florida Department of Business & Professional Regulation (FL DBPR) issues and enforces every construction-trade license in the state. Each of the five licenses above — the “CGC”, “CCC”, “CMC”, “CFC”, and “EC” prefixes — represents a separate state exam, continuing-education requirement, insurance minimum, and public complaint record. Aldo took every one of them, personally.

01Not a trade group

These are state-issued licenses, not memberships in an industry association. Enforced by Florida law with financial and criminal penalties for violation.

02Verifiable in public

Every license is searchable on the FL DBPR public license portal. Discipline, complaints, and expiration status are on file. There’s no hiding behind “my qualifier handles that.”

03Held by a person, not a company

Every one of Aldo’s licenses is issued to him individually. If Dellamano Construction Inc. ever dissolved, the licenses stay with the person. Companies don’t get licensed. Humans do.

04Rare in the market

Very few South Florida contractors hold more than one primary trade license. Holding five — and using them personally rather than qualifying subs — is the differentiator.

Every project. Every trade. One signature.

Talk to the licensed owner directly.

Aldo answers his own line during business hours. No gatekeeper, no assistant taking down your address to “pass along.”

Text Aldo Call the office