Cities + towns served
Local crews where you live.
Next step
Get an honest written quote.
Photo-documented assessment. Itemized quote. We’ll tell you if repair makes more sense than replacement.
Services we provide
Every roofing service, available statewide.
Cities + towns served
Local crews where you live.
Next step
Get an honest written quote.
Photo-documented assessment. Itemized quote. We’ll tell you if repair makes more sense than replacement.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to New Hampshire.
Camp-to-year-round conversion roofing problems
Many lake-region camps were built for seasonal use — minimal insulation, no proper ventilation, undersized roofs for year-round snow load. We reroof these with full code-current spec, often requiring deck reinforcement.
White Mountain snow load engineering
Mountain NH framing assumptions vary dramatically by town. We work with structural engineers to verify capacity before any reroof in the higher elevations.
Ice dam zone on the lake-region eastern slopes
East-facing roofs in the Lakes Region see late-winter sun on a cold, snow-loaded roof — the worst ice-dam combination. Heat cables plus attic remediation plus ice-and-water shield retrofit is our standard combined response.
Services we provide
Every roofing service, available statewide.
Cities + towns served
Local crews where you live.
Next step
Get an honest written quote.
Photo-documented assessment. Itemized quote. We’ll tell you if repair makes more sense than replacement.
The climate, in detail
Roofing for the New Hampshire climate.
Mountain NH (Conway, Bretton Woods, Lincoln) sees 200+ inches of annual snowfall in the White Mountains. Lake NH (Wolfeboro, Meredith, Lakes Region) sees 70–110 inches with brutal freeze-thaw cycles. Seacoast NH (Portsmouth, Dover, Hampton) sees less snow but more hurricane wind. Southern NH (Nashua, Salem, Manchester) is closer to MA conditions.
Lakeside camps (originally seasonal) now used year-round throughout the Lakes Region. Federal-style brick and clapboard colonials in the older mill cities (Manchester, Nashua, Concord). Mountain camps, ski-house chalets, and rustic vernacular in the White Mountains. New construction colonial revivals in southern NH commuter towns.
What we see here
Three roofing patterns specific to New Hampshire.
Camp-to-year-round conversion roofing problems
Many lake-region camps were built for seasonal use — minimal insulation, no proper ventilation, undersized roofs for year-round snow load. We reroof these with full code-current spec, often requiring deck reinforcement.
White Mountain snow load engineering
Mountain NH framing assumptions vary dramatically by town. We work with structural engineers to verify capacity before any reroof in the higher elevations.
Ice dam zone on the lake-region eastern slopes
East-facing roofs in the Lakes Region see late-winter sun on a cold, snow-loaded roof — the worst ice-dam combination. Heat cables plus attic remediation plus ice-and-water shield retrofit is our standard combined response.
Services we provide
Every roofing service, available statewide.
Cities + towns served
Local crews where you live.
Next step
Get an honest written quote.
Photo-documented assessment. Itemized quote. We’ll tell you if repair makes more sense than replacement.
Roofing across New Hampshire
Roofing for New Hampshire — for the lake camp, the mountain home, and the seacoast colonial.
NH’s range is severe — coastal Portsmouth, lake-region Wolfeboro, White Mountain Conway, and southern Salem all need different roof specs. Mountain NH sees the second-highest snow load in the lower 48 (Mount Washington alone). Lake NH sees ice-dam-grade freeze-thaw. Coastal NH sees hurricane wind. Each gets a different install spec from us.