What every Bayonne homeowner should know about roofs covering materials, storm damage, roof lifespan, drainage, ventilation, and hiring smart.
What every Bayonne homeowner should know about rv rubber roof coating, explained without the sales pitch.
Read more โOn a peninsula with water on three sides, the part of a Bayonne roof that fails first is rarely the shingle, it is the metal. Here is what salt air does to flashing and fasteners, and how to slow it down.
Read more โWith open water on three sides and nothing to slow the gusts, Bayonne roofs take wind pressure that inland roofs never feel. Here is how uplift works and how to roof against it.
Read more โMost of Bayonne is built shoulder to shoulder, and re-roofing an attached home is a different job than re-roofing a freestanding house. Here is what the shared walls, cornices, and tight lots change.
Read more โBayonne sits low and close to the water, which gives roof runoff nowhere easy to go. Here is why drainage matters more on the peninsula and what a system built for it looks like.
Read more โNot every roofing material handles salt air and harbor wind the same way. Here is an honest look at how asphalt, metal, and low-slope membrane hold up on the Bayonne peninsula.
Read more โBayonne's working waterfront and industrial corridor put grit, soot, and airborne debris on nearby roofs. Here is what that does to a roof and how to keep ahead of it.
Read more โFrom a single leak to a full new roof, our Bayonne crew gets up there, inspects it free, photographs what we find, not a sales pitch.