Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.
Roofing for Vermont — engineered for the mountains, the farmhouse, and the deep winter.
Vermont sees the most snow in NE outside of NH’s White Mountains, the coldest sustained winter temperatures, and the most historic-house roofing in the region. Many Vermont farmhouses are on their fourth or fifth roof — and the framing was over-engineered enough that slate is still viable. We do a lot of standing-seam metal on Vermont homes for the same reason: heritage choice, 60+ years of life, sheds snow gracefully.
Cold and snowy. 80–150 inches of annual snowfall depending on elevation. Sub-zero F for weeks at a time in the higher elevations. Less hurricane exposure than coastal NE. Maple-sugaring spring with extreme freeze-thaw cycles that wear asphalt faster than coastal NE.
Vermont farmhouse vernacular (clapboard, steep pitch, attached barn). Greek Revival and Federal-style throughout the older villages. Cape Cod homes in lower elevations. Ski-condo and chalet construction (Stowe, Killington, Mt. Snow). Modern timber-frame and post-and-beam homes built in the last 30 years.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to Vermont.
01
Historic farmhouse slate roofs at end-of-life
Many Vermont farmhouses have original slate roofs from 1890–1920 that are entering the failure window. Replacement options: matching natural slate ($28+/sq ft), synthetic slate ($14/sq ft), or standing-seam metal ($16–22/sq ft).
02
Deep snow load on low-pitch sections
Older Vermont homes often have low-pitch additions (kitchens, mudrooms, attached sheds) that weren’t framed for modern snow accumulation. We verify capacity before reroofing low-pitch areas in higher elevations.
03
Maple-sugaring spring freeze-thaw damage
Vermont’s mid-March to mid-April sees the most freeze-thaw cycles in NE. Asphalt shingles age faster here than at lower latitudes; we typically recommend higher-grade shingles (Class IV impact, premium architectural) in the mountain towns.