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Peaks & Valleys

Washington roofing, built for Washington weather.

From Sound-corridor windstorms in Snohomish County to Spokane snow load and ice dams — Washington roofs fail in completely different climates, and we build for all of them. Crews stage in the Everett area and downtown Spokane.

Cities we serve in Washington

Spokane County

Airway Heights

Out on the West Plains, Airway Heights has nothing to slow the weather — wind sweeps the flats, summer hail rolls through, and winter cold sets in hard. This fast-growing town's roofs need real exposure engineering, and we bring it from our Spokane office minutes away.

Airway Heights details →
Skagit County

Anacortes

Out on Fidalgo Island, Anacortes roofs live in full marine exposure — salt air off Rosario Strait, ferry-town wind, and view lots facing the San Juans. That changes the hardware and the details, and we build for the water.

Anacortes details →
Snohomish County

Arlington

Wind funnels down the Stillaguamish valley and across the flats by the airport, and Arlington roofs take it broadside. We've re-shingled enough homes between Smokey Point and the old downtown to know which failure comes next.

Arlington details →
King County

Ballard

Old Scandinavian Seattle by the ship canal and the Sound, Ballard mixes century-old bungalows with a wave of new townhomes. Roofs here run from craftsman-era steep pitches to flat modern infill — and take salt air off Shilshole. We build for all of it.

Ballard details →
King County

Bellevue

Across the lake from Seattle, Bellevue pairs high-end neighborhoods with dense new construction. Roofs here range from lakefront estates to modern flat-roofed builds, and both demand precision. Our crews cover the Eastside from the north.

Bellevue details →
Whatcom County

Bellingham

Bellingham weather has a mean streak the rest of the west side doesn't: Fraser Valley outflow winds that arrive arctic and howling. Roofs here need Sound-country rain detailing and genuine cold-wind engineering.

Bellingham details →
King & Snohomish County

Bothell

Bothell straddles King and Snohomish counties, a dozen microclimates, and sixty years of housing styles — from Main Street's old bones to brand-new townhome rows. We work all of it.

Bothell details →
Spokane County

Browne's Addition

Spokane's first neighborhood and a National Historic District, Browne's Addition is grand mansions, brick apartments, and tree-lined character just west of downtown. Roofs here demand craft and know real winter. Our office is minutes away.

Browne's Addition details →
Skagit County

Burlington

Burlington sits on the open Skagit delta where retail meets farmland — and where delta wind hits roofs broadside with nothing to slow it. We build for the flats.

Burlington details →
Island County

Camano Island

Camano Island roofs live surrounded by saltwater — marine wind, salt air, and view-lot exposure with nothing between the house and the weather. That changes how a roof should be built, and we build for the island.

Camano Island details →
King County

Capitol Hill

Seattle's densest, most eclectic hill — from Millionaire's Row mansions to apartment blocks and townhomes. Roofs here are a mix of steep historic pitches and flat urban membrane, all with tight-access logistics. We handle the whole range.

Capitol Hill details →
Spokane County

Chattaroy

North of Colbert toward Mount Spokane, Chattaroy is genuine rural snow country — acreage, timber, and winters the city never sees. Roofs here are built for load, or they pay for it in spring.

Chattaroy details →
Spokane County

Cheney

Out on the West Plains there's no terrain to slow the weather down — Cheney roofs take wind, snow, and sun in full measure. We build for the plateau and price for a college town.

Cheney details →
Spokane County

Colbert

On Spokane's north edge, Colbert's pine-shaded acreage and newer estate neighborhoods sit at enough elevation to take real winter. Roofs here need snow-country detailing and canopy-smart maintenance, both minutes from our Spokane office.

Colbert details →
King County

Columbia City

One of Seattle's oldest neighborhoods and a designated landmark district, Columbia City is craftsman-era homes and a preserved main street. Roofs here deserve craft and, sometimes, design review — we manage both.

Columbia City details →
Spokane County

Deer Park

North of Spokane the elevation climbs and the snow numbers climb with it. Deer Park and the surrounding acreage carry loads and cold that city roofs never see — and shed them onto driveways and outbuildings if nobody planned for it.

Deer Park details →
King County

Duvall

In the pastoral Snoqualmie Valley northeast of the Eastside, Duvall is small-town and semi-rural — farms, acreage, and heavy tree cover. Roofs here take canopy, valley damp, and the outbuildings country living brings.

Duvall details →
Snohomish County

Edmonds

Edmonds sits where the ferry docks meet the bluff, and its roofs live in salt air with a Sound view — beautiful exposure that punishes cheap flashing and cheap crews. We build for the water.

Edmonds details →
Snohomish County

Everett

Everett roofs live a harder life than the forecast suggests: salt-adjacent air off Port Gardner, wind funneling down the bluff neighborhoods, and some of the oldest housing stock in the county. This is our home turf — our crews stage here.

Everett details →
Spokane County

Fairfield

South of Spokane on the Palouse farmland, Fairfield is small-town and agricultural. Roofs here take open wind, real snow, and the outbuildings of farm country — all standard work for our Spokane crews.

Fairfield details →
Whatcom County

Ferndale

On the Whatcom flats near the coast and the refineries, Ferndale roofs catch open wind and the cold Fraser outflow both. We build for the combination.

Ferndale details →
King County

Fremont

Eclectic, canal-side, and proudly its own thing, Fremont blends craftsman bungalows with tech-era renovation and new infill. Roofs here run from steep old pitches to modern flat sections, under Seattle's steady damp. We build for both eras.

Fremont details →
Snohomish County

Granite Falls

Granite Falls is the gateway to the Mountain Loop, where the foothills start and the weather gets serious. Roofs here catch more snow, more wind, and more falling-limb risk than the lowland stock — and they need to be built for it.

Granite Falls details →
King County

Green Lake

Wrapped around Seattle's most-loved lake, Green Lake is craftsman and Tudor homes under a heavy tree canopy. Roofs here fight moss and lake damp, and the older stock rewards real craft.

Green Lake details →
Spokane County

Greenacres

On the east end of Spokane Valley toward Liberty Lake, Greenacres mixes established homes with steady new growth. Roofs here take real Inland Northwest winter, minutes from our crews.

Greenacres details →
King County

Greenwood

Craftsman and bungalow north Seattle with a walkable commercial spine, Greenwood and Phinney Ridge mix classic homes with flat storefront roofs. We build for both under the northern damp.

Greenwood details →
Spokane County

Hillyard

Spokane's old railroad neighborhood in the north end, Hillyard is working-class history — modest older homes with real character and real needs. Roofs here call for honest value and straight answers. Our office is minutes away.

Hillyard details →
King County

Issaquah

Nestled against the Issaquah Alps, Issaquah pairs newer master-planned communities with older downtown character — and a little more mountain weather. Roofs here reward snow-aware detailing and HOA-ready craft.

Issaquah details →
Spokane County

Kendall Yards

Spokane's modern riverfront development on the bluff above the Spokane River, Kendall Yards is new-construction townhomes and contemporary homes — often with flat and low-slope roofs. We build for the modern stock as readily as the historic.

Kendall Yards details →
King County

Kenmore

At the north tip of Lake Washington, Kenmore mixes lakeside homes, wooded lots, and steady growth. Roofs here take lake damp and heavy tree cover, and our crews cover it from just north.

Kenmore details →
King County

Kirkland

On the Eastside's waterfront, Kirkland mixes lakefront homes, walkable neighborhoods, and steady redevelopment. Roofs here take lake damp and view-lot exposure, and our Eastside coverage reaches it easily.

Kirkland details →
King County

Lake City

Along the old highway in northeast Seattle, Lake City is practical, mid-century Seattle — modest homes aging on the usual clock, now densifying with new construction. Roofs here need honest value and straight answers, minutes from our Everett-area crews.

Lake City details →
Snohomish County

Lake Stevens

Lake Stevens grew fast, and its roofs are aging in waves — whole neighborhoods of 1990s and 2000s builds hitting shingle end-of-life within a few years of each other. We've worked enough streets around Frontier Village and up toward Machias to see the wave coming.

Lake Stevens details →
Spokane County

Liberty Lake

Liberty Lake's neighborhoods were built to a standard — consistent rooflines, HOA review, real curb-appeal discipline. The weather off the Idaho line didn't sign that agreement, so the roofs have to hold it up alone.

Liberty Lake details →
Whatcom County

Lynden

Up in the Nooksack Valley near the border, Lynden combines tidy Dutch-heritage neighborhoods with dairy and berry country — and sits directly in the path of the Fraser outflow. Roofs here need cold-wind engineering and the standard the town keeps.

Lynden details →
Snohomish County

Lynnwood

Lynnwood is where south Snohomish County got dense — and where a whole generation of 1960s–80s split-levels and ramblers is hitting roof end-of-life at once. We work these streets constantly.

Lynnwood details →
King County

Madrona

On the slope down to Lake Washington, Madrona and Leschi mix grand historic homes with modest bungalows and real views. Roofs here are steep, tree-shaded, and worth doing with care.

Madrona details →
King County

Magnolia

Set on its own bluff above Puget Sound near Discovery Park, Magnolia is upscale, wooded, and marine-exposed. Roofs here take salt air and view-lot wind, and reward crews who know both.

Magnolia details →
Snohomish County

Marysville

When a front pushes across Port Susan and Possession Sound, Marysville roofs catch it first. We've replaced enough wind-lifted shingle fields off Getchell Hill and around Sunnyside to know the pattern by heart — and to build against it.

Marysville details →
Spokane County

Mead

North of Spokane the ground rises toward Mt. Spokane and the snow numbers rise with it. Mead and Green Bluff roofs carry loads that downtown never sees — and shed them onto driveways, decks, and gas meters if nobody planned for it.

Mead details →
Snohomish County

Meadowdale

Perched on the bluff above Puget Sound between Edmonds and Lynnwood, Meadowdale pairs water views with real marine exposure. Roofs here take salt air, bluff wind, and heavy tree cover — and our Everett-area crews are minutes away.

Meadowdale details →
Spokane County

Medical Lake

Medical Lake sits among the West Plains lakes, where open exposure meets lakeside moisture. Roofs here take the plateau wind, the summer hail, and the four-season swing that inland eastern Washington is known for.

Medical Lake details →
Snohomish County

Mill Creek

Mill Creek was master-planned around trees, trails, and consistent rooflines — which makes roofing here equal parts craft and paperwork. We're fluent in both.

Mill Creek details →
Spokane County

Millwood

Tucked inside Spokane Valley, tiny Millwood keeps its own small-town identity and some of the area's older, character-rich homes. We bring the same four-season roofing know-how here, minutes from our downtown office.

Millwood details →
Snohomish County

Monroe

Monroe sits where the Skykomish valley opens toward the Sound — which means mountain weather arrives here first and hardest on its way west. We build roofs for the corridor accordingly.

Monroe details →
King County

Montlake

Tucked between the arboretum and the cut, Montlake is one of Seattle's most established neighborhoods — Tudors and colonials on quiet, tree-shaded streets. Roofs here demand craft, and our crews reach it easily.

Montlake details →
Skagit County

Mount Vernon

Skagit Valley weather comes in flat and hard — delta wind off the bay, valley rain that lingers, and the occasional convergence-zone surprise. Mount Vernon roofs earn their keep, and so do the crews who work on them.

Mount Vernon details →
Snohomish County

Mountlake Terrace

On the Snohomish–King line, Mountlake Terrace is postwar suburbia now on the light-rail map. Roofs here are hitting end-of-life in waves, and our Everett-area crews are minutes north.

Mountlake Terrace details →
Snohomish County

Mukilteo

Between the ferry landing and the top of the bluff, Mukilteo roofs live in marine weather that inland homes never meet. Salt-adjacent air and hillside wind exposure change how a roof should be built — and we build for it.

Mukilteo details →
Spokane County

Newman Lake

Out on Spokane County's eastern edge near the Idaho line, Newman Lake combines lakeside moisture with real four-season weather. Roofs here take snow, freeze-thaw, and shade-fed moss all at once.

Newman Lake details →
Spokane County

Nine Mile Falls

Northwest of Spokane along the Spokane River and Long Lake, Nine Mile Falls trades city density for pines, acreage, and a little more weather. Roofs here deal with real snow, heavy tree cover, and the outbuildings that come with country property.

Nine Mile Falls details →
King County

North Bend

Where I-90 climbs into the mountains beneath Mount Si, North Bend is the real Cascade gateway — genuine snow, heavy timber, and mountain weather. Roofs here need snow-country engineering, and we build for the elevation.

North Bend details →
Snohomish County

North Everett

Everett's oldest, grandest neighborhood — Rucker Hill mansions, Grand Avenue Victorians, and the tree-lined historic core above the bay. Roofs here are steep, layered, and salt-touched. Our crews are based right here.

North Everett details →
King County

Northgate

Built around the old mall and now a light-rail hub, Northgate is north Seattle's mid-century core — ramblers and split-levels aging on the usual clock, with redevelopment rising around them. Roofs here need honest value and ventilation know-how, minutes from our crews.

Northgate details →
Spokane County

Otis Orchards

Out toward the Idaho line east of Spokane Valley, Otis Orchards is semi-rural acreage country. Roofs here take four-season weather and the outbuildings country property brings, minutes from our Spokane crews.

Otis Orchards details →
Whitman County

Pullman

Home to WSU and set in the rolling Palouse hills, Pullman roofs take wind across open ground, real winter snow, and the wear of a dense student-rental market. We bring documentation-first roofing to a town that cycles hard.

Pullman details →
King County

Queen Anne

Crowning the hill north of downtown Seattle, Queen Anne is grand old homes, steep streets, and some of the city's best views. Roofs here demand craft on the historic stock and real logistics on the slopes. We bring both.

Queen Anne details →
King County

Ravenna

Wrapped around its wooded ravine near the University District, Ravenna is classic craftsman Seattle — steep old rooflines under a deep tree canopy. Roofs here reward craft and fight moss, and our crews cover northeast Seattle easily.

Ravenna details →
King County

Redmond

Home to a booming tech corridor, Redmond mixes established neighborhoods with rapid new construction. Roofs here span mid-century homes and modern flat-roofed builds — we handle both, minutes into the Eastside.

Redmond details →
Spokane County

Rockford

South of Spokane where the Palouse farmland begins, Rockford and the surrounding small towns take open wind, real snow, and farm-country practicality. We roof houses, shops, and barns alike out here.

Rockford details →
King County

Sammamish

Up on the plateau between Lake Sammamish and the Cascades, Sammamish is newer, upscale, and a touch higher and wetter than the valley. Roofs here reward HOA-ready craft and plateau-aware detailing.

Sammamish details →
Skagit County

Sedro-Woolley

Where the Skagit flats meet the North Cascades, Sedro-Woolley is the gateway up Highway 20 — and its roofs sit at the transition from valley rain to foothill snow. We build for both.

Sedro-Woolley details →
King County

Shoreline

Just north of Seattle, Shoreline is established mid-century suburbia now getting light rail and new density. Roofs here are aging in waves, and our Everett-area crews cover it as home turf.

Shoreline details →
Snohomish County

Silver Lake

Around the lake in south Everett, Silver Lake is family-neighborhood suburbia — 1970s–90s developments aging in waves. Roofs here are hitting end-of-life together, and our crews are minutes away.

Silver Lake details →
Skagit County

Skagit County

One county, three climates: salt-edged wind on the flats, valley rain through the middle, and Cascade-foothill snow up the Highway 20 corridor. Skagit roofing done right means knowing which third you're standing in.

Skagit County details →
Snohomish County

Snohomish

The antique capital of the Northwest has some of the county's most beautiful — and most demanding — roofs. Victorians and craftsman homes in the historic district don't forgive shortcuts, and we don't take them.

Snohomish details →
Spokane County

South Hill

Spokane's South Hill is where the city's stateliest homes climb the basalt above downtown — Tudors, brick colonials, and craftsman estates on steep, tree-lined streets. Roofs here carry real character and real winter, and both deserve craft. Our office sits minutes away on Riverside.

South Hill details →
Spokane County

Spokane

Spokane roofing is a different sport than the west side plays: snow load, ice dams, freeze-thaw cycling, and 90-degree summers on the same shingles. Our Spokane office sits on Riverside — this is the climate our east-side crews build for all year.

Spokane details →
Spokane County

Spokane Valley

Spokane Valley's ranchers and split-levels were framed for a milder story than the one the sky actually tells here: hail in June, hundred-degree stretches in August, ice in January. We build roofs for the whole calendar.

Spokane Valley details →
Snohomish County

Stanwood

Out on the Stillaguamish delta there's nothing between your roof and the weather coming off Port Susan — no hills, no tree line, just distance. Stanwood roofs need to be built like they know that.

Stanwood details →
Spokane County

Valleyford

In the rolling country south of Spokane Valley, Valleyford is semi-rural acreage living. Roofs here take four-season weather and country-property outbuildings, a short run from our Spokane crews.

Valleyford details →
Spokane County

Veradale

In the heart of Spokane Valley, Veradale is established family suburbia — ranchers and split-levels aging on the usual clock. Roofs here need honest four-season detailing, minutes from our office.

Veradale details →
King County

Wallingford

Between Fremont and the U-District, Wallingford is dense craftsman-bungalow Seattle — steep pitches, mature trees, and tech-era renovation. Roofs here run classic, and we build them to last under the damp.

Wallingford details →
King County

Wedgwood

Quiet, tree-lined, and established, Wedgwood is northeast Seattle's mid-century heart — solid postwar homes aging on the usual clock. Roofs here need honest value and ventilation know-how.

Wedgwood details →
Whatcom County

Whatcom County

Whatcom is where Pacific Northwest rain meets genuinely continental cold — the Fraser Valley outflow turns the county's northeast into the windiest, iciest roofing environment on the west side. We build for both weathers, because Whatcom homes get both.

Whatcom County details →
King County

Woodinville

Green, semi-rural, and known for its wineries, Woodinville mixes acreage properties with newer neighborhoods on the Eastside's north end. Roofs here take heavy canopy and the outbuildings country property brings.

Woodinville details →

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