Specifying for the Open Range
Roofs that handle sun and squall lines
Metal has earned its place as the rural standard, and we install standing-seam and exposed-fastener systems on everything from farmhouses to barns and outbuildings. For owners who prefer shingle, we use high-wind architectural lines with enhanced fastening, because a gust crossing a mile of open pasture hits harder than the same wind in town.
Walls and windows that do not flinch
Fiber cement siding takes the UV and the sideways rain without complaint, and impact-rated windows spare you the shutter scramble when a storm spins up over the interior. Both also cut the cooling load on homes that sit in full sun all day.
- Metal and shingle roof replacement for homes, barns, and workshops
- Fiber cement and board-and-batten siding in true farmhouse profiles
- Impact and energy-efficient windows for sun-blasted exposures
- Soffit, fascia, and porch-ceiling work on wraparound and deep porches
A Contractor That Shows Up Past the Pavement
Plenty of coastal contractors will not drive the extra half hour east. We do, and we have for 25 years. Alpine Exteriors has completed more than 2,000 projects across west-central Florida, and our rural work follows the same rules as everything else: firm written scopes, clean sites, and gates left the way we found them, closed. Distance never dilutes the spec, either: the same underlayments, fastening schedules, and finish details we bring to a coastal job ride east on the truck, because the weather out here has more than earned them.
Our 25-year workmanship warranty travels just fine down a dirt driveway, and so does our estimator: every Myakka City project begins with a free on-site estimate, because acreage homes, with their additions, porches, and outbuildings, can never be quoted accurately from an aerial photo. Tell us what the last storm did or what the next one worries you about, and we will give you a plan with real numbers attached.