Roofing, gutters & insulation across Polk County.
Polk County is the Des Moines metro. Dense suburbs, mid-century ranches, new subdivisions, and aging 80s builds all side by side. We work the metro west-to-east, from Clive and Urbandale out to Ankeny.
What we notice working in Polk County.
Metro homes come with more HOA considerations, tighter access, and higher traffic on surrounding streets. Our crew plans Polk County jobs around morning school traffic and afternoon pickup windows. Small thing, matters.
Our crew routes Polk County jobs alongside home-base Dallas County stops so travel time stays reasonable and scheduling stays honest. No “2 weeks out” stalling because we over-committed across 4 counties in one day.
7 cities we serve.
Older Urbandale neighborhoods along Aurora and 86th St have gutters dating to original construction. Most have sagged, lost pitch, or leaked…
View page →Older Clive subdivisions along 86th and Hickman have heavy oak and maple cover. Shingle grit from old roofs and leaf loads in fall put real …
View page →Grimes has more open agricultural exposure north of town than metro-interior suburbs. Wind loading on roofs and air infiltration through rim…
View page →Older West Des Moines neighborhoods (pre-1990) frequently have R-19 to R-30 attic insulation. Bringing to R-49 is common. Newer Jordan Creek…
View page →Johnston has more ranch and two-story homes than bungalows. Two-story Johnston homes often have complex attic geometry (knee walls, shed dor…
View page →Polk City homes near the lake see higher humidity and more moisture-related wear on gutters and fascia. Aluminum gutters hold up fine, but f…
View page →Ankeny’s rapid growth means we see a lot of homes that are exactly 18-22 years old right now — original asphalt shingles reaching the end of…
View page →One call gets an estimate in Polk County.
Christian answers the phone. No receptionist, no call-center routing. Real numbers and an honest recommendation in the first conversation.