Roof system · Full exterior integration
Full Exterior Roofing Scope
A roof does not stop at the shingles or membrane — ventilation drives attic life, flashings marry the roof to walls and penetrations, and gutters and siding transitions move water away from the structure. We treat these as one conversation when it affects performance.
Evaluations often surface issues that are not visible from a single trade’s scope: intake blocked at soffits, step flashing tied to siding replacement, or gutter overflow pointing to slope or downspout capacity. Addressing the roof without the adjacent plane can leave the same leak path active.
Best for
- Storm or age-related projects where multiple exterior planes may be involved
- Homes with complex wall-roof junctions, dormers, or multi-level drainage paths
- Owners who want one coordinated assessment before splitting work across separate scopes
What to know
- Code and manufacturer requirements for ventilation are tied to attic volume and vent types.
- Step and counter-flashing work must agree with siding detail and replacement sequences.
- Gutter performance is both capacity and maintenance — sometimes the fix is upstream on the roof plane.
Strata maps how water moves from ridge to grade, flags where trades overlap, and documents what belongs in the roofing scope versus adjacent exterior work so decisions stay grounded in the building, not a line-item list.
Ready to talk about your roof?
Start with an inspection and clear guidance on what makes sense for your home.

