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Roofing Contractor in New Brighton, PA

Platinum Home Exteriors is a roofing contractor in New Brighton, and every project starts with an Amish crew at the property for an in-person inspection before any estimate is written. No satellite data is used. Every measurement is taken on foot, on the roof, and flashing is cut on site to fit the actual pitch, plane, and substrate of each specific roofline rather than shaped off a screen image.

Platinum does not subcontract. The crew that conducts the inspection is the same crew that completes the installation, so the person who identified every condition is the person who addresses it during the job. Nothing gets reinterpreted between a measurer's notes and an installer's hands. Call (330) 275-0935 to schedule a free inspection.

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Serving New Brighton and the Surrounding Area

Of New Brighton Borough's 2,559 occupied housing units, 47.2 percent are owner-occupied. Renters hold a slight majority of the occupied stock, which means a substantial share of New Brighton homeowners are managing properties that house tenants, and roof deterioration on those properties carries both maintenance costs and landlord liability. Owners who occupy their own homes face the same deteriorating stock and carry every dollar of that cost themselves. Full service area details are at Beaver Falls, PA.

Housing structures in New Brighton carry a median build year of approximately 1935, placing the average roof at roughly 91 years old in 2026. That age is not a minor factor. Roofing systems on homes from that era have typically been replaced at least once, and what is beneath the current surface layer (original board sheathing, accumulated moisture, previous flashing laps) determines what the next replacement actually requires. A physical inspection is the only way to establish what is there before committing to a scope.

New Asphalt Shingle Roof On Home For New Brighton, {State Code}
Metal Roof Replacement For a Pennsylvania Resident

Roofing Conditions in New Brighton

Incorporated in 1838 and built out rapidly through the Pennsylvania Canal era and the railroad decades that followed, New Brighton is one of the oldest boroughs in Beaver County, and its housing stock reflects that age throughout. Most structures predate 1940. American Foursquare and Victorian two-story homes dominate the dense street grid near the Beaver River, while pre-war Colonial Revival and vernacular worker cottages fill the residential blocks running east from the commercial corridor. Almost no postwar suburban infill exists within the compact one-square-mile borough footprint, which means the age of the housing stock is uniform rather than diluted by newer construction.

On the Foursquare and Victorian two-stories along Third Avenue and the numbered cross streets above it, the primary failure mode is deterioration at the headwalls and step flashings where steep gable planes intersect dormers and vertical wall sections, paired with original board sheathing that has absorbed decades of moisture through successive surface replacements. Boards crack and compress. When a deck has been wet and dried repeatedly over nine decades, shingle fasteners lose holding capacity before the surface layer shows any visible distress, and a replacement that goes down without addressing the substrate condition will face the same problems within a fraction of its rated life. Pre-war Colonial Revival homes on the hillside streets above Third Avenue add complex rooflines with multiple valley intersections where debris accumulates and standing water accelerates membrane failure.

Beaver County was among the primary designees under FEMA DR-4618 following the Hurricane Ida remnants that struck western Pennsylvania on September 1, 2021. That filing window is closed. Pennsylvania allowed homeowners two years from the storm date to submit an insurance claim, and that deadline passed in September 2023. Any New Brighton roof that absorbed wind uplift or hail impact during that event and was never inspected is carrying concealed deterioration through every weather season since, and a current physical inspection creates a written record that matters when the next storm occurs.

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Roofing Permits in New Brighton

Roof replacements in New Brighton fall under Beaver County permit jurisdiction, and a permit is required before installation begins. Permit requirements cover the scope of work, the materials going down, and a final post-installation inspection before the project officially closes. Closed means closed. Platinum files the permit application, coordinates the inspection, and handles every step of the process as a standard part of every job in Beaver County. Homeowners in New Brighton have never had to contact a permit office on a Platinum project. Unpermitted roofing work creates insurance documentation problems and property resale disclosure issues that surface years after the job is done, when no contractor is available to address them.

Example Of New Metal Roof For New Brighton Residents

Roofing Services in New Brighton, PA

Pre-war homes throughout New Brighton require a full deck assessment before any new shingles go down, because original board sheathing from the 1920s and 1930s may have sustained moisture damage through successive replacement cycles that the current surface layer conceals entirely. Deck condition determines scope. Platinum's replacement process includes a documented substrate inspection, Class 4 impact-rated shingle installation for homeowners seeking insurer premium reduction documentation, and a fixed-price written estimate before any work begins.

Headwall and step flashing failures on New Brighton's older Foursquare and Victorian two-stories are the repair Platinum crews address most often in the borough, typically presenting as moisture in wall framing long before any ceiling stain appears below. Act early. Repairs that address the flashing and surrounding membrane while the deck is still structurally sound stop a localized failure from becoming a full replacement scope that could have been avoided.

Standing seam and corrugated steel are a practical match for New Brighton's steep-pitch pre-war profiles, and a metal roof on a Foursquare or Victorian two-story can outlast two or three asphalt replacement cycles in the freeze-thaw conditions western Pennsylvania produces each winter. Metal does not rot. For New Brighton homeowners already on their second or third replacement cycle, the long service horizon of steel roofing eliminates the recurring substrate and flashing concerns that follow asphalt on aging homes.

The Beaver River runs along New Brighton's western boundary, and the borough's terrain drains toward that corridor, creating a runoff load that failing or undersized gutters redirect toward foundations and soffits rather than away from them. Seams fail first. Platinum fabricates seamless gutter systems on site to the exact run length of each roofline, removing the joint separations where sectional gutters accumulate debris and fail under volume. Every bracket placement and downspout position is determined by the actual drainage grade of the property, not a standard spacing template.

Pennsylvania homeowners have two years from a storm event to file a property insurance claim, and that window runs from the storm date, not the date damage first becomes visible. Act quickly. Platinum accompanies every New Brighton homeowner through the adjuster walkthrough on storm damage claims, and on the borough's older Foursquare and Victorian homes, the conditions adjusters most often miss are at headwall flashings and dormer intersections that require physical roof access to document. Getting those areas into the claim before the adjuster closes the file is the step that most directly affects what a homeowner recovers.

Similar Metal Roof To New Brighton, PA Work

Amish Roofing Crews in New Brighton

Platinum's Amish crews begin every New Brighton project at the property, on the roof, before any estimate is written. Nothing is measured from a screen. On New Brighton's Foursquare and Victorian two-stories, where dormers, steep intersecting gable planes, and headwall junctions create geometry that varies section by section on the same house, every flashing dimension and shingle count has to be taken in person to be accurate. Prefabricated profiles built for simpler modern construction do not fit the irregular angles and worn masonry surfaces that pre-war New Brighton rooflines present, and getting those fits wrong creates the leaks that bring homeowners back to contractors a second time.

The same crew that runs the inspection builds the estimate, sources materials, and completes the full installation without handing the project off at any stage. No phase changes hands. Before leaving any New Brighton property, the crew runs a magnetic nail sweep across the full lot, clears all gutter channels of installation debris, and walks every shingle course from ridge to eave before calling the job complete. Every roof replacement in New Brighton is backed by the Industry Leading Craftsmanship Warranty.

How a New Brighton Roof Job Works

1

Free Inspection

An Amish crew visits the property in person, takes physical measurements, and documents every condition before any quote is prepared.

2

Written Estimate

A fixed-price written estimate covers all labor and materials, based entirely on in-person measurements taken by the installation crew.

3

Permit Filing

Platinum files the required permit with the appropriate Beaver County permit authority before the installation crew arrives at your property.

4

Installation

The same crew completes the full job, cuts all flashing on site, and runs a nail sweep plus gutter clearance before leaving.

5

Industry Leading Craftsmanship Warranty

The same crew completes the full job, cuts all flashing on site, and runs a nail sweep plus gutter clearance before leaving.

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New Brighton Frequently Asked Roofing Questions

Q:Do I need a permit for a roof replacement in New Brighton?

A:Yes. Roof replacements in New Brighton require a Beaver County building permit before installation begins. Platinum handles the full process. The application, the materials review, and the final post-installation inspection are all managed by Platinum as a standard part of every contract in Beaver County. No New Brighton homeowner on a Platinum project has had to visit a permit office, fill out paperwork, or track down an inspection on their own. Unpermitted work creates insurance documentation problems and property resale disclosure issues that tend to surface years after the job is complete.

Q:My New Brighton home was built in the 1920s. What should I know before getting a roof replacement?

A:Homes built in the 1920s in New Brighton almost always have original board sheathing beneath whatever surface layer is currently on the roof. Old sheathing hides damage. That sheathing absorbs moisture through decades of successive replacement cycles in ways that are invisible from a ladder or the street, and a deck that appears sound from above may have structural softness that only becomes apparent when the existing shingles are removed. Platinum prices every New Brighton replacement with a full deck assessment built in, and any sheathing that requires repair is addressed before new materials go down.

Q:New Brighton has two individual NRHP-listed properties. Does that affect a roof replacement?

A:The Merrick Art Gallery and the Irish-Townsend House are individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places, but neither listing creates a review requirement for routine residential roof replacements elsewhere in the borough. Worth confirming. If a specific property has its own historic designation or sits within a locally designated area, the homeowner should verify review requirements with Beaver County before work begins. Platinum's permit process covers standard Beaver County requirements, and any additional review specific to a historically designated property would be identified during that process.

Communities We Serve from New Brighton

For roof replacement, repair, and gutter work throughout New Brighton, call Platinum Home Exteriors at (330) 275-0935.

Daugherty, PA