When re-roofing makes sense
Repeated leaks, widespread corrosion, end-of-life roofing, poor past repairs, tired fixings, or major exterior renovations can all make replacement more practical than another patch.
Re-roofing is the planned replacement of an existing roof system. It is often the right conversation when leaks keep returning, materials are tired, or a property needs a better long-term roof plan.
Repeated leaks, widespread corrosion, end-of-life roofing, poor past repairs, tired fixings, or major exterior renovations can all make replacement more practical than another patch.
Homes and commercial buildings need different planning. Residential work often focuses on disruption and finish, while commercial projects add site access, staging, safety, and continuity considerations.
A re-roof conversation should include roof condition, flashings, gutters, fascia, cladding junctions, access, insulation, ventilation, and product suitability.
The best re-roof is not just new sheets. It is a coordinated roof system that suits New Zealand weather, property use, and future maintenance.
No. Repair targets a specific issue. Re-roofing replaces the roof system when age, condition, or repeated defects make replacement the more sensible path.
Yes. Gutters, fascia, flashings, and roof edges should be reviewed because they affect how the new roof performs.
Share what is pushing the re-roof decision, whether it is leaks, corrosion, age, or renovation plans, and ADCO can talk through practical metal re-roofing options.
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