Re-Roofing a Community Built in One Decade
Because Feather Sound's homes went up together in the late 1970s and 1980s, their roofs age together too — and right now much of the community is in the replacement window at the same time. Insurance carriers know it: Pinellas homeowners with roofs past the fifteen-to-twenty-year mark are seeing non-renewal letters and inspection demands across the county. Alpine Exteriors replaces Feather Sound roofs to current Florida Building Code, documents everything for your carrier, and handles the architectural quirks this community's construction era built into its rooflines.
Those quirks are real. Many Feather Sound homes combine conventional shingle slopes with mansard faces and genuine low-slope or flat sections over lanais and entries — three different roofing systems on one house. Contractors who only know steep-slope shingle work leave the transitions vulnerable, and the transitions are precisely where bay-driven rain gets in. We detail every change of pitch with the correct membrane, metal, and overlap sequence, because a roof is only as good as its weakest junction.
