The Three Upgrades We Recommend Most in Bloomingdale
Roof replacement, on your timeline
Hillsborough County carriers have gotten strict about shingle age, and many Bloomingdale roofs installed after the 2004 storm season are now crossing the threshold that triggers underwriting scrutiny. Replacing proactively — with sealed deck details and a wind mitigation inspection — protects both the house and the premium.
Window replacement that pays twice
Original 1980s aluminum single-pane windows are the biggest energy leak in most homes here. Modern impact-rated vinyl units cut cooling bills in a climate where the AC runs nine months a year, silence the traffic hum from Bloomingdale Avenue and Lithia Pinecrest, and remove the need for shutters when a storm spins up in the Gulf.
Siding and trim triage
Many two-story homes in these subdivisions carry hardboard or early composite siding on upper floors and gables — products that absorb Florida humidity and fail from the edges inward. Fiber cement replacement ends that cycle permanently.
Why Neighbors Choose Alpine
- 25 years in business, long enough to have seen every 1990s builder shortcut these subdivisions hide behind their stucco and brick accents
- More than 2,000 completed projects, from single-window swaps to full envelope overhauls
- A 25-year workmanship warranty on our installations — matching the lifespan of the products we put on your home
- Free on-site estimates with written scopes, so you can compare bids line by line instead of guessing
We handle Hillsborough County permitting, coordinate with HOA architectural review boards — a familiar step in Bloomingdale's deed-restricted sections — and keep job sites clean enough for the school-run traffic these streets see every weekday.
If your home is showing its age at the edges, have us out. We will walk the exterior with you, rank what actually needs attention now versus later, and give you numbers you can plan around. Thirty-year-old houses in a neighborhood this established are worth doing right.