Roofing Large Homes on Wooded Keystone Lots
The roofs in Keystone are big. Custom homes on the acreage between Odessa, Citrus Park, and Lake Keystone routinely carry forty or fifty squares of shingle across complicated hip-and-valley layouts, and most of that roofing works under or beside mature live oaks. That combination — large complex roofs plus constant tree exposure plus west-central Florida's ferocious thunderstorm season — defines what roofing means in this zip code. Alpine Exteriors has built its Keystone roofing practice around it.
Trees are the local wildcard. A limb strike is obvious; the slower damage is not. Overhanging branches abrade shingle granules with every windy afternoon, leaf mats in valleys hold moisture against the surface, and shaded northern slopes grow algae streaks that shorten shingle life. When we inspect a Keystone roof we map the tree exposure slope by slope, because it tells us where the roof is genuinely aging versus where it just looks tired.
