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Peaks & Valleys

Oregon roofing, built for Oregon weather.

Willamette Valley rain is patient: forty inches a year, moss on every north slope, and low-pitch mid-century roofs that need real drainage detail. Our Oregon operation runs on the crews and license (CCB #249563) of the respected Eugene company we acquired.

Cities we serve in Oregon

Linn County

Albany

Mid-valley between Eugene and Salem, Albany holds one of the largest collections of historic homes in Oregon — roofs worth doing right. We bring valley-rain know-how and the craft those homes demand.

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Lane County

Coburg

Just north of Eugene, tiny Coburg carries one of Lane County's best-preserved historic districts — homes worth roofing with intention. We bring the same craft the town's antique-row buildings deserve.

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Benton County

Corvallis

Home to OSU and some of the valley's heaviest rain, Corvallis roofs work hard against moisture and moss. We bring honest, documentation-first roofing to a town that values doing things right.

Corvallis details →
Lane County

Cottage Grove

The covered-bridge capital of Oregon knows what good construction looks like — some of it has been standing over local creeks for a century. Cottage Grove homes deserve roofing built with the same intention.

Cottage Grove details →
Lane County

Creswell

Just down I-5 from Eugene, Creswell keeps its small-town feel while catching the same patient Willamette Valley rain. Roofs here age the valley way — slowly, greenly, from the shaded side first — and our Lane County crews treat it as home turf.

Creswell details →
Polk County

Dallas

West of Salem in the Polk County foothills, Dallas catches a little more Coast Range rain and the canopy that comes with it. Roofs here age the wet-valley way, and our Willamette Valley crews cover the west side as readily as the east.

Dallas details →
Lane County

Eugene

Our Oregon story started here: we acquired a respected Eugene roofing outfit and kept what made it good — the crews, the standards, and OR CCB #249563. In the Willamette Valley, the enemy isn't wind or snow. It's forty inches of patient, mossy rain.

Eugene details →
Polk County

Independence

On the river south of Salem, Independence pairs a historic riverfront downtown with surrounding farm country. Roofs here take mid-valley rain and open-ground wind, and our west-side crews cover it as home turf.

Independence details →
Lane County

Junction City

On the flat north end of the valley, Junction City roofs get the wind that Eugene's hills deflect — and its farm-country owners want roofing decisions that pencil out. Both suit us fine.

Junction City details →
Marion County

Keizer

Just north of Salem along the Willamette, Keizer keeps its own tidy-suburb identity and catches the same patient valley rain. Roofs here age the mid-valley way — slowly, mossy, from the shaded side first — and our Willamette Valley crews treat it as home turf.

Keizer details →
Linn County

Lebanon

East of Albany toward the Cascades, Lebanon sits where the valley floor climbs into foothill country. Roofs here take a little more rain, a little more weather, and the rural properties that come with the ground. Our Willamette Valley crews cover it.

Lebanon details →
Lane County

Oakridge

Up Highway 58 in the Cascade foothills, Oakridge gets a mountain winter the valley floor never sees — genuine snow load, hard freezes, and heavy timber all around. Roofs here need snow-country engineering, and we build for the elevation.

Oakridge details →
Benton County

Philomath

Just west of Corvallis at the foot of the Coast Range, Philomath catches some of the valley's heaviest rain. Roofs here work hard against moisture and moss, and our Willamette Valley crews cover the wet west side as home turf.

Philomath details →
Lane County

Pleasant Hill

Southeast of Eugene toward the Cascade foothills, Pleasant Hill trades town density for acreage, tree cover, and a little more weather. Rural roofs here deal with heavy canopy, longer response distances, and the outbuildings that come with country property — all standard Lane County work for us.

Pleasant Hill details →
Marion County

Salem

Oregon's capital sits mid-valley, where the rain is patient, the oaks are old, and the housing stock spans a century and a half. Salem roofs age the valley way — slowly, greenly, and from the shaded side first.

Salem details →
Marion County

Silverton

East of Salem where the valley meets the foothills, Silverton pairs a beloved historic downtown with a little more rain and elevation. Roofs here reward craft on the old homes and drainage smarts on the low-pitch stock.

Silverton details →
Lane County

Springfield

Across the river from Eugene, Springfield keeps its mill-town practicality — homeowners here want the number, the schedule, and the truth. That's conveniently our entire business model, backed by OR CCB #249563.

Springfield details →
Marion County

Stayton

Southeast of Salem along the North Santiam, Stayton sits where the valley climbs toward the Cascades — a bit more rain, a bit more weather, and the rural properties that come with foothill country. Our Willamette Valley crews know the ground.

Stayton details →
Linn County

Sweet Home

East of Lebanon on the Santiam Highway, Sweet Home is the gateway to the Cascades — timber country where the weather gets real. Roofs here deal with heavy rain, canopy, and, at elevation, the wet snow the valley floor never sees.

Sweet Home details →
Lane County

Veneta

West of Eugene, past Fern Ridge, the Coast Range starts squeezing extra rain out of every front before it reaches town. Veneta roofs live on the wet side of an already wet valley — and under more trees than almost anywhere we work.

Veneta details →
Marion County

Woodburn

On the I-5 corridor between Salem and Portland, Woodburn mixes farm country, a large retiree community, and steady growth. Roofs here take the mid-valley rain and the open-ground wind of the north valley floor.

Woodburn details →

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