Royston / Union Bay

Wind damaged shingle repair for Royston and Union Bay homes.

These are the homes that take the storm first. The page speaks to exposed roofs, lift-prone edges, and the damage that shows up right after a strong coastal wind event.

Exposure
Open water
Main issue
Edge blow-off
First move
Document damage

The content helps homeowners tell the difference between a repairable storm event and a roof that has already been weakened by corrosion and repeated exposure.

01

The edges go first in high wind.

Uplift usually shows up at ridges, rakes, and eaves before the rest of the field looks damaged.

02

Rust and lifting can work together.

Corroded fasteners reduce pull-out resistance, so the damage is often older and deeper than the visible shingle loss suggests.

03

Storm documentation reduces friction.

The route makes it easy for homeowners to request a local inspection that produces a clear, usable record of what happened.

Best-fit services

Services that follow a storm

The copy feels direct and practical because the homeowner is likely dealing with a fresh event, not a long-term planning exercise.

Storm restoration

For wind events, lifted shingles, and visible damage after a blow.

Edge reinforcement

For roofs that need stronger perimeter detailing before the next storm cycle.

Coastal replacement

For roofs that have been taking salt and wind long enough to justify a longer-term upgrade.

Scope path

How the storm-damage conversation goes

The route makes the next steps obvious without sounding alarmist or vague.

Step 01

Inspect the damage path

Edges, valleys, flashings, and soft metals usually tell the story before the center of the roof does.

Step 02

Choose repair or replacement

The page helps homeowners understand whether the roof can be tightened up or needs a larger reset.

Step 03

Document for the next storm

A simple record of the damage helps the homeowner understand what changed and why it matters.

After the wind event

Use the Royston / Union Bay page as the storm-response entry point

The page gives an exposed homeowner confidence that the problem is being looked at through the lens of local weather, not generic roof damage language.

Request a check