Our Approach to Pasco's Boom-Era Housing
We treat every job as a moisture investigation first. Soft fascia usually traces back to gutters that overflowed for years; crumbling gable siding often hides sheathing that needs replacement; stained soffits can signal roof-edge leaks that a new roof must fix before trim work makes sense. Because we are a full exterior contractor with 25 years in the trade, we diagnose the cause instead of cladding over it.
Materials are chosen for the environment. Within the sea-breeze zone west of US 19 — and especially on canal streets where boats sit behind the houses — we specify fiber cement with corrosion-resistant fastening. It is immune to rot and termites, holds paint several times longer than wood, and carries the wind ratings Pasco County requires. For budget-focused projects, premium vinyl over rebuilt sheathing and fresh weather barrier delivers excellent value on these modest footprints.
Jurisdiction is a quiet trap in this part of Pasco: the city of Port Richey and the unincorporated county pockets around it run permitting just differently enough to stall an out-of-area crew. Our office confirms which rules apply before we quote, files the right paperwork, and lines up inspections so the job never sits idle.
The projects we run most often here
- Gable-end tear-off and re-clad in fiber cement, both street-facing peaks
- Full soffit and fascia replacement with vented panels for attic airflow
- Mobile and modular home re-siding in the parks off Ridge Road
- Storm repair and matching when squalls peel loose older cladding
Small Jobs Welcome, Long Warranty Standard
Plenty of contractors will not return calls for a two-gable job on a 1,200-square-foot ranch. We built our reputation on exactly that work — over 2,000 projects, many of them modest, all of them treated as if the whole neighborhood were watching, because in Port Richey it usually is.
Every installation is protected by our 25-year workmanship warranty, and every project begins with a free on-site estimate. We will probe the trim, photograph the trouble, separate must-do from can-wait, and leave you a written scope — no pressure, no games, just the numbers.