Montrose has Houston’s most distinctive housing stock — bungalows from the 1910s, four-squares from the 20s, mid-century apartments, the occasional Victorian survivor. Tight lots, mature trees, narrow streets, multiple-decade-old roofs with surprises underneath. We’ve worked here long enough to know what to expect.
Montrose homes have been through 80-100 years of Houston weather. Most have had 3-5 roof replacements over the decades, often from different roofers, sometimes with different layering rules in effect.
Common findings during tear-off:
Montrose has some of the most mature urban tree canopy in Houston — live oaks, water oaks, pecans, hackberries, all 50-80+ years old. They’re part of what makes the neighborhood, and they’re part of why we get more tree-damage calls here than almost any other submarket.
What we see:
Tree damage roof scope applies to most of this. Insurance covers tree-fall damage regardless of whose tree it was; claim representation is included.
Montrose lots are typically 50″ wide, sometimes less. Front yards are short. Streets are narrow with plenty of street parking. Alleys exist behind some blocks but aren’t universal.
What we adjust:
The historic neighborhood character is part of what residents value. We try not to compromise it during the few days we’re working there.
Many are. The neighborhood’s housing stock dates heavily from the 1910s-1940s — bungalows, four-squares, Victorian carriage houses, mid-century apartments. Many have been through multiple owners and multiple roof replacements; we frequently find decking and structural surprises during tear-off.
Not for most properties. Houston has very limited historic preservation jurisdiction compared to cities like Galveston or San Antonio. Some properties in Montrose are individually designated; most aren’t. We confirm individual designation status before pulling permits.
Montrose has some of Houston’s most mature urban tree canopy, which means more tree-damage roof calls than typical. Tree damage scope applies regularly. Limb falls, full-tree falls during storms, and ongoing debris damage are part of the area.
Montrose streets and alleys are narrower than typical Houston. We use small-footprint dumpsters, plan delivery for off-peak hours, and minimize curb obstruction. Crew vehicles rotated rather than parked all-day on-street.
Yes, always. Texas building code allows up to two layers but we tear off and re-deck on every project regardless. Layered roofs hide structural issues, weight overload structural framing, and don’t hold warranties properly. The few hundred dollars saved on tear-off isn’t worth it.
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