Farmhouse Character Without Farmhouse Maintenance
Most Dover homeowners we meet do not want their place to look like a subdivision house, and it does not have to. Fiber cement comes in true lap profiles, smooth panels and authentic board-and-batten, so a 1940s farmhouse off Gallagher Road can keep its vertical lines and deep trim while gaining a cladding that termites cannot eat and sun cannot rot. It holds paint several times longer than wood in this climate, and it does not become airborne debris the way brittle, sun-aged vinyl can in a strong storm cell coming up the I-4 corridor.
For Dover's block homes, the work is usually stucco remediation plus a full eave rebuild. Open-field rain wets soffits and fascia constantly, and we routinely find rot hiding above gutters that look fine from the ground.
- Board-and-batten and lap fiber cement for farmhouse and ranch profiles
- Stucco crack repair and recoating on concrete-block homes
- Soffit, fascia and gutter-line rebuilds in rot-proof materials
- Skirting and trim solutions for manufactured and elevated homes on acreage
Straight Answers, Written Scope
Everything starts with a free on-site estimate, and on rural properties that visit matters even more than usual: we walk every elevation, check where sprinklers and livestock fencing meet the walls, probe the trim, and photograph what we find. You get a written scope with real line items, not a number scribbled on a business card.
With more than 2,000 projects completed across Florida, we have the crew depth to handle a full farmhouse re-clad without dragging it across a month of half-days. And every installation carries our 25-year workmanship warranty, because siding on open land has nowhere to hide, and neither should the contractor who installed it.
From McIntosh Road to Turkey Creek and the quiet lanes off Sydney Road, if your walls are due, we would like to take a look before the next storm season does. Most re-clads out here finish in days rather than weeks, and you will know the schedule, and the full price, before we drive the first nail.