What 1980s and 1990s Homes Here Typically Need
Hardboard and early composite sidings from Pebble Creek's build-out years absorb Florida humidity at every unsealed edge, and we replace a great deal of it with fiber cement that keeps the same architectural look without the swelling. Original aluminum-frame single-pane windows leak conditioned air all summer; modern impact-rated replacements cut noise from Bruce B. Downs traffic, drop cooling bills, and satisfy insurers in one move. And shingle roofs from the 2000s are now aging into the 15-to-20-year window where Florida carriers start demanding replacement as a condition of coverage.
A typical whole-exterior consultation in Pebble Creek covers:
- Roof condition and remaining insurable life, documented with photos
- Siding moisture readings at bottom edges, corners, and window sills
- Window and slider performance — seals, operation, and impact rating
- Fascia, soffit, and gutter health under the community's mature oak canopy
Those oaks deserve a mention of their own: the shade is one of the best things about this neighborhood, but shaded north walls hold moisture and grow algae, and overhanging limbs abrade shingles. We plan materials and maintenance around that reality.
A Contractor That Treats the House as One System
Alpine Exteriors has been doing this work for 25 years, with more than 2,000 projects completed — enough repetition to know exactly how a 1989 frame two-story behaves when you open up a wall. Everything we install carries our 25-year workmanship warranty, which covers the labor and integration details that manufacturer warranties quietly exclude.
If you are anywhere in Pebble Creek — on the fairway streets, the cul-de-sacs backing the conservation areas, or the newer sections toward Cross Creek Boulevard — we offer free on-site estimates. One visit, a straight assessment of what actually needs attention this year versus what can wait, and written pricing you can plan around. No pressure, no phased sales pitch, just a clear picture of your home's exterior from people who work on your neighbors' houses every week.