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Jersey City Quality Roofing
Hudson County, NJ

Roof Inspection in West New York, NJ

Wind-exposure assessments calibrated for Palisades cliff-edge conditions -- we identify what the wind is doing to your roof before the next storm proves it.

Serving 54,399 residents in West New York

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Roof Inspection in West New York: What Local Homeowners Need to Know

Roof inspection in West New York is not a routine checklist exercise. It is a wind-exposure assessment that must account for conditions that exist nowhere else in Hudson County. When we inspect a roof in West New York, we are not simply looking for visible damage and wear. We are evaluating how every component of the roof system is performing under the sustained and peak wind forces that the Palisades cliff-edge geography imposes. A shingle that looks intact to the eye may be a few storms away from failure if its adhesive bond has been progressively weakened by the cyclical wind loading that Boulevard East properties endure during every weather event. A flat roof membrane that appears sound on the surface may have edge securement that is gradually losing pullout resistance as the wind works against the fasteners storm after storm. Our inspections detect these developing vulnerabilities before they become active failures, and that proactive identification is worth far more than the reactive emergency repair that follows when a storm exposes the weakness catastrophically.

The Palisades cliff edge creates inspection requirements that are unique to West New York. Properties along Boulevard East face wind from two directions: easterly winds that accelerate as they rise up the cliff face from the Hudson River, and westerly winds from approaching storm systems that hit the Palisades crest with concentrated force. This dual-direction exposure means we must inspect both sides of every roof element rather than just the windward face. A Boulevard East building's roof has no sheltered side. The parapet on the east face takes uplift from the cliff-accelerated wind, and the parapet on the west face takes direct storm impact. Ridge caps on pitched roofs are stressed from both directions rather than predominantly from one prevailing wind direction. This comprehensive inspection approach takes more time than a standard inspection but provides the complete picture that cliff-edge property owners need to make informed maintenance decisions.

The neighborhoods of West New York each have inspection profiles shaped by their building types and their position relative to the cliff edge. Boulevard East requires the most intensive inspection protocol, with specific attention to wind uplift indicators at every membrane edge, parapet, and penetration point. The mid-rise and high-rise buildings here have enormous roof surfaces where wind conditions vary significantly between the field center and the corner zones, and each zone must be inspected with its appropriate wind loading context. Bergenline Avenue mixed-use buildings need inspections that evaluate both the roof membrane condition and the drainage system performance, because the original construction on most of these buildings provided inadequate slope-to-drain. The 60th Street row houses need detailed inspection of every valley, dormer, and wall junction where the complex geometries concentrate water and wind stress. Park Avenue walk-up apartments need inspection of the aging flat roof membranes with particular attention to drain condition and debris accumulation from the adjacent James J. Braddock Park tree canopy. Palisade Avenue buildings need assessment of whether the original wind-resistance specifications remain adequate for the actual Palisades forces that this one-block-inland location delivers.

Our West New York inspection protocol produces a building-specific wind vulnerability assessment alongside the standard condition report. For every property, we classify the wind exposure zone, document the current wind resistance details including membrane attachment type, fastener density, edge metal specification, and parapet termination method, and evaluate whether these details meet the actual wind loading at the property's specific location. This wind assessment is unique to our West New York inspections and provides information that generic roofing inspections do not capture. The property owner receives a clear picture of not just what condition the roof is in today but how it is likely to perform in the next major wind event, and what upgrades would improve that performance. This information enables proactive investment in wind resistance before the storm rather than reactive emergency spending after it.

We perform inspections on every building type in West New York's inventory. The mid-rise and high-rise residential buildings on Boulevard East require rope access or man-lift equipment for facade-adjacent inspections, and we carry the safety certifications and equipment to inspect these tall structures safely. The flat-roofed walk-up apartments throughout the town can be accessed by ladder for standard inspections. The pitched-roof row houses in the 60th Street area require physical access to the roof surface for hands-on evaluation of shingle adhesion, flashing integrity, and valley condition that cannot be reliably assessed from the ground or from drone imagery alone. We use drone documentation to supplement our physical inspections, providing overhead imagery that helps property owners understand the spatial patterns of wear and damage across the entire roof surface.

Our Roof Inspection Process in West New York

1

Exterior Visual Assessment

30-45 minutes

Ground-level and roof-level examination of shingle condition, flashing integrity, gutter function, chimney and vent condition, and overall roof geometry.

2

Interior/Attic Inspection

20-30 minutes

Assessment of attic ventilation, insulation condition, moisture presence (stains, mold, rot), structural member integrity, and daylight penetration.

3

Moisture Detection

15-20 minutes

Use of infrared camera and moisture meter to detect hidden water intrusion not visible to the naked eye, particularly around penetrations and valleys.

4

Photo Documentation

15-20 minutes

Comprehensive photography of all findings — both problem areas and areas in good condition — to create a complete record of the roof's current state.

5

Report Generation

1-2 business days

Detailed written report with numbered photos, condition ratings for each component, estimated remaining lifespan, and prioritized repair/maintenance recommendations.

Roof Inspection Across West New York Neighborhoods

Boulevard East

Inspections on Boulevard East are our most comprehensive protocol, requiring assessment of wind uplift indicators at every membrane edge, parapet termination, and penetration flashing detail. We check fastener pullout resistance by testing representative attachment points with a calibrated gauge, and any location where the measured pullout is below the required resistance for cliff-edge uplift gets flagged for immediate remediation. The parapet caps along the east-facing cliff edge receive especially close attention because wind-driven moisture penetrating the parapet wall from underneath accelerates the concrete deterioration that leads to sudden parapet cap displacement during high-wind events. Our Boulevard East inspections typically take 50 to 75 percent longer than inspections of comparable-size buildings at lower elevations due to the additional wind-resistance checks.

Most Common Issue

Progressive fastener pullout loss and parapet cap moisture deterioration from sustained dual-direction cliff-edge wind cycling.

Bergenline Avenue

Bergenline Avenue inspections focus on the dual challenge of membrane condition and drainage performance. We survey the roof surface for ponding evidence including algae staining, sediment rings, and membrane discoloration that indicate where water stands after rain events. The mixed-use buildings along this commercial corridor often have rooftop HVAC equipment that was installed or replaced by contractors who cut the membrane and reinstalled it around the new equipment curb without proper flashing integration, creating penetration vulnerabilities that only become apparent during heavy rain. Our inspection protocol includes detailed evaluation of every penetration flashing detail, not just the membrane surface condition, because the penetrations are the most likely failure points on these partially sheltered commercial flat roofs.

Most Common Issue

Improper penetration flashing around retrofit HVAC equipment combined with chronic ponding from inadequate original drainage design.

60th Street Area

Row house inspections in the 60th Street area require hands-on evaluation of the complex roofline geometries that define this neighborhood. We physically walk every valley, checking for debris accumulation that blocks water flow, flashing displacement that allows water under the shingle courses, and shingle granule loss in the valley center where concentrated water flow erodes the surface. The dormers and step-down transitions get equal attention because these architectural features create wind shadow zones on the leeward side and wind acceleration zones at the edges, and the shingle wear patterns reveal which wind vectors are most active at each location. Ground-based or drone-only inspections miss the critical tactile indicators, such as shingle tab adhesion and flashing flexibility, that determine whether a valley or transition is approaching failure.

Most Common Issue

Valley debris accumulation and flashing displacement on complex row house rooflines requiring physical hands-on inspection to detect approaching failures.

Park Avenue Area

Park Avenue walk-up apartment inspections include specific attention to the drain systems and the organic debris load from James J. Braddock Park's tree canopy. We clear and inspect every drain during the inspection rather than just noting whether the drains appear functional from a distance. Leaves, seed pods, and small branches from the park's mature trees accumulate in drain sumps and on the membrane surface, creating organic acids that accelerate membrane deterioration and blocking the drainage pathways that prevent ponding. The annual inspection cycle for Park Avenue buildings ideally occurs in late autumn after leaf fall to capture the maximum seasonal debris load and ensure all drains are clear before winter freeze-thaw conditions begin, which is when ponding water causes the most severe membrane damage.

Most Common Issue

Seasonal organic debris accumulation from Braddock Park blocking drains and creating acidic membrane deterioration on aging walk-up flat roofs.

Palisade Avenue

Palisade Avenue sits one block inland from the cliff edge, providing some shelter from the most extreme Boulevard East wind conditions but still experiencing significantly elevated wind loads compared to inland locations. Our Palisade Avenue inspections evaluate whether the original roof installation accounts for this intermediate wind zone or was specified for a lower wind classification. Many of the 1950s and 1960s buildings here were installed with standard mechanically attached membranes that may be adequate for lower elevations but marginal for the actual Palisades wind at this one-block-inland position. We specifically check perimeter and corner zone attachment density because these zones experience two to three times the uplift of the field center, and marginal attachment at the perimeter is where wind-driven membrane peeling initiates.

Most Common Issue

Marginal perimeter attachment density on mid-century flat roofs where original specifications underestimate the Palisades wind loads at this intermediate elevation.

Roofing Materials for West New York Roof Inspection

Roof inspection in West New York does not change the materials on the roof, but our inspection findings directly inform the material specifications for any repairs or replacements that the inspection identifies as needed. When we inspect a West New York roof, we evaluate not just whether the existing materials are in good condition but whether they are the right materials for the actual wind and environmental conditions the building faces. A roof covered with standard galvanized flashing that is performing adequately at seven years may be approaching the end of its effective life at this elevation, whereas the same flashing at sea level would have another eight years of service. We flag these elevation-adjusted lifespan concerns in our inspection reports so property owners can plan proactively rather than being surprised by premature material failure. Our inspection tools include a calibrated fastener pullout gauge that measures the actual holding force of representative fasteners in the roof deck. This measurement is critical in West New York because the wind uplift forces at the cliff edge require specific minimum pullout values, and aged concrete decks, deteriorated wood decking, and corroded fasteners can all reduce the actual pullout below the required minimum. When we find fastener pullout below the threshold for the property's wind classification, we document the specific locations and the measured values, providing the property owner with objective data rather than subjective opinion about whether the attachment system is adequate. We also use infrared thermal imaging during appropriate conditions to identify moisture trapped within the roof assembly. On West New York flat roofs that have been patched multiple times over the years, moisture trapped between membrane layers or within saturated insulation is invisible from the surface but creates the conditions for accelerated deterioration and structural loading. The infrared survey identifies the extent of moisture contamination so that repair or replacement scope can be accurately defined rather than discovered during the work when costs are harder to control. The combination of physical inspection, fastener testing, and infrared imaging gives West New York property owners a complete understanding of their roof system's current condition and remaining useful life.

Infrared Camera

Thermal imaging technology that detects temperature differentials indicating hidden moisture intrusion behind roofing materials.

N/A (inspection tool)Included in inspection fee

Moisture Meter

Electronic device that measures moisture content in wood decking, framing, and insulation to quantify water damage severity.

N/A (inspection tool)Included in inspection fee

Drone Aerial Photography

UAV-mounted cameras providing high-resolution aerial views of the entire roof surface, especially useful for steep or inaccessible roofs.

N/A (inspection tool)Included in comprehensive inspection

Common Roof Inspection Challenges in West New York

Our West New York inspection process begins with a pre-visit review of the property's location relative to the Palisades cliff edge and the building's construction type. This pre-visit assessment determines which wind exposure classification applies and which specific wind-resistance checks will be included in the on-site inspection. Boulevard East properties receive our comprehensive cliff-edge protocol. Palisade Avenue and the first blocks inland receive our intermediate protocol. Bergenline Avenue and western locations receive our elevated-wind standard protocol. On-site, the inspection follows a systematic progression: perimeter walkdown examining all edge metal, parapet termination, and drip edge conditions; field inspection covering the membrane or shingle surface, seam condition, and fastener integrity; penetration evaluation at every pipe, curb, drain, and equipment platform; drainage assessment including physical clearing and flow testing of all drains; and interior inspection of accessible ceiling areas below the roof for staining, moisture, or structural deflection. For cliff-edge properties, we add the fastener pullout testing at representative points in each wind zone, the parapet back-side inspection for concealed deterioration, and the dual-direction wind damage pattern analysis. The inspection report is delivered within three business days and includes a condition summary, a prioritized maintenance recommendation list with estimated costs, a wind vulnerability assessment with the property's exposure classification and any identified deficiencies in wind resistance, and a photographic documentation package. The report is formatted to serve multiple audiences: the property owner for decision-making, the insurance carrier for documentation, and any future contractor for repair or replacement scope definition. We maintain inspection records for every West New York property we evaluate, creating a longitudinal history that reveals degradation trends over time and helps property owners anticipate maintenance needs before they become emergencies.

  • Palisades cliff-edge wind exposure on east-facing properties
  • High-rise apartment roof systems requiring specialized access equipment
  • Palisades cliff-edge wind acceleration on Boulevard East properties
  • Hidden moisture damage behind intact-looking shingles — a common issue in West New York due to the area's moderate hurricane risk and 2-3 per year nor'easters
  • High-rise roofing requires registered design professional sign-off

Need Roof Inspection in West New York?

Free estimates with no obligation.

Roof inspection costs in West New York are modestly higher than in lower-elevation communities due to the additional time required for the wind-exposure assessment that is integral to every West New York inspection. A standard residential inspection on a row house or small multi-family building in the 60th Street area or along Palisade Avenue typically costs $350 to $500 and takes approximately ninety minutes on-site. A commercial or large multi-family inspection on a walk-up apartment building along Park Avenue or Bergenline Avenue ranges from $500 to $850 depending on the roof area and the number of penetrations and drainage points that require detailed evaluation. Boulevard East mid-rise and high-rise inspections are the most expensive due to the specialized access requirements and the comprehensive wind-resistance evaluation. These inspections range from $800 to $1,500 depending on the building height and the access method required. If rope access or a man-lift is needed for facade-adjacent inspection, the equipment rental and safety personnel add to the cost. However, the value proposition of these inspections is compelling: identifying a developing parapet failure or progressive fastener pullout on a Boulevard East building before it becomes an emergency typically saves ten to twenty times the inspection cost in avoided emergency repair, water damage, and accelerated replacement expenses. We recommend annual inspections for all Boulevard East cliff-edge properties and biennial inspections for inland West New York buildings.

What Affects Your Roof Inspection Cost

Inspection Type

Basic visual inspections cost less than comprehensive inspections with infrared, moisture meters, and drone photography. Real estate transaction inspections are typically comprehensive.

moderate

Roof Size and Complexity

Larger roofs with multiple planes, dormers, and penetrations take more time to inspect thoroughly.

moderate

Roof Accessibility

Steep-slope roofs or multi-story buildings requiring ladder extensions or drone deployment add to inspection scope.

low

Report Detail Level

Insurance claim reports and real estate reports require more detailed documentation than routine maintenance inspections.

low

A Real Roof Inspection Story in West New York

A condominium association managing a six-story residential building on Palisade Avenue contacted us for what they described as a routine annual inspection. The building was constructed in 1963 with a flat roof that had been recovered with a mechanically attached EPDM membrane in 2012. The association had not had the roof inspected since the 2012 installation and assumed the twelve-year-old membrane was performing well because they had experienced only one minor leak, which a handyman patched with a tube of sealant.

Our inspection revealed a roof system that appeared sound at first glance but was developing multiple wind-related vulnerabilities that would have become active failures within one to two more storm seasons. The mechanically attached EPDM membrane was installed with a fastener density appropriate for a standard wind zone, but the building's position one block from the Palisades cliff edge placed it in an intermediate wind classification that required approximately 30 percent more fasteners per square foot in the perimeter and corner zones. We measured fastener pullout resistance at twenty representative points across the roof and found that seven of the twenty were below the required threshold for the actual wind conditions, indicating that the fasteners were losing grip in the aging concrete deck.

More concerning, the east-facing parapet showed signs of water infiltration behind the membrane termination that had been masked by the parapet cap covering. We found concrete spalling at the parapet wall top course that was visible only when we lifted the membrane termination bar and inspected behind it. This concealed deterioration meant the parapet was losing the structural integrity needed to anchor the membrane edge against wind uplift, and a sustained high-wind event could have peeled the membrane from the entire east parapet, which is the cliff-facing side that receives the strongest uplift forces.

Our inspection report recommended immediate reinforcement of the perimeter and corner zone attachment with additional fasteners to meet the actual wind classification, parapet wall repair and re-termination of the membrane with expansion anchors into sound concrete, and replacement of the corroding galvanized termination bar with stainless steel. The association authorized the work, which cost $14,500 and was completed in three days. The inspection itself cost $650, meaning the total proactive investment was $15,150. Had the parapet failed during a storm, the emergency tarping, membrane repair, water damage remediation in the top-floor condos, and accelerated full replacement timeline would have easily exceeded $80,000. The annual inspection investment paid for itself many times over by catching a developing failure that had no visible symptoms from inside the building.

What Our Customers Say

After the nor'easter damaged our 1920s brownstone roof on Van Vorst Street, Jersey City Quality Roofing replaced the entire thing in four days. They handled the historic district permit and matched the slate look with architectural shingles. Outstanding crew — clean, professional, and on schedule every day.

Michael Rodriguez

Jersey City

We had a persistent leak in our Heights apartment building that three other contractors could not find. Jersey City Quality Roofing used an infrared camera and traced it to a failed pipe boot two floors away from the ceiling stain. Fixed in one afternoon. Should have called them first.

Sarah Kim

Jersey City

We hired them for a full TPO roof system on our Journal Square commercial building — about 8,000 square feet. The crew worked efficiently around our tenants, the tapered insulation eliminated the ponding problem we had for years, and the manufacturer warranty gives us peace of mind for decades.

David Okonkwo

Jersey City

A tree branch came through our roof during a summer storm in Bergen-Lafayette. They had a crew here within the hour tarping the hole and boarding it up. The permanent repair was done the following week. Only wish they had weekend scheduling for the follow-up, but the emergency response was top-notch.

Angela Martinez

Jersey City

Our Bloomfield Street brownstone had ice dam damage along the entire front eave last winter. These guys repaired the flashing, replaced the damaged shingles, and recommended ventilation improvements to prevent recurrence. Very knowledgeable about Hoboken's older buildings.

James O'Brien

Hoboken

Replacing the roof on our Washington Street row house required Historic District Commission approval. Jersey City Quality Roofing handled the entire application process and used materials that satisfied the commission while actually improving the roof performance. Five stars for navigating Hoboken's red tape.

Priya Patel

Hoboken

We were buying a third-floor condo on Park Avenue and needed a roof inspection of the building. Their report was incredibly detailed — infrared photos, moisture readings, estimated remaining life, and a maintenance plan. The seller ended up crediting us $8,000 toward the purchase based on the findings.

Thomas Walsh

Hoboken

During last March's nor'easter, our flat roof membrane blew open on Garden Street and water was pouring into our top-floor apartment. They came out at 11 PM, tarped everything, and had us dry by morning. Emergency response in Hoboken doesn't get better than this.

Maria Gonzalez

Hoboken

Our Cape Cod on Avenue C needed a complete roof replacement — the old 3-tabs were curling and missing after 25 years. They installed GAF Timberline HDZ shingles with ice-and-water shield along all the eaves and valleys. Beautiful result, and the dormers look great.

Robert Kowalski

Bayonne

Had a leak around the chimney flashing on our two-family on East 22nd Street. They replaced all the step and counter flashing and re-sealed the cricket. No more leaks through two heavy rainstorms since. Price was fair for the amount of work involved.

Josephine DeLuca

Bayonne

We had them inspect our Bergen Point rental property after a tenant complained about a ceiling stain. Turned out it was a condensation issue from inadequate attic ventilation, not a roof leak. They explained the difference clearly and recommended a fix. Saved us from an unnecessary roof repair.

Carlos Ramirez

Bayonne

Wind ripped the ridge cap off our house near Stephen Gregg Park during a storm. Water was running down both sides of the ridge into the attic. They were here in under an hour, sealed everything up that night, and did a full ridge cap replacement two days later.

Patricia Murphy

Bayonne

Our split-level on Woodcliff Avenue sits right on the Palisades ridge where the wind is brutal. They installed a wind-rated system with six nails per shingle instead of the standard four, plus extra ice shield in the valleys. First winter with zero issues after years of wind damage with the old roof.

Ahmed Hassan

North Bergen

We own a retail building on Tonnelle Avenue and needed the flat roof replaced. The modified bitumen was failing everywhere. They installed a new TPO system with proper drainage and it completely solved the ponding water problem. Great job on a large commercial project.

Lisa Chen

North Bergen

The valley on our colonial in Tyler Park was leaking into the dining room. They replaced the valley flashing and underlayment and re-shingled the affected area. Good work, though scheduling took a bit longer than expected due to their busy season.

Anthony Ferraro

North Bergen

We signed up for their commercial maintenance program for our garden apartment complex near Braddock Park. Twice a year they inspect, clean the drains, and fix small issues before they become big ones. Our emergency repair costs have dropped to nearly zero since we started.

Fatima Begum

North Bergen

Our row house on Bergenline has a flat roof that shares walls with both neighbors. These guys understood the shared-wall flashing situation perfectly — they repaired our side without disturbing the neighbor's roof. Hard to find contractors who understand Union City row house roofing.

Juan Herrera

Union City

Replacing the flat roof on our three-family walk-up in Union Hill was a challenge because of the tight street access. They managed the material delivery with a crane from the alley side and finished in three days. EPDM membrane with proper drainage — no more ponding.

Veronica Santos

Union City

They repaired the flat roof over our restaurant on Bergenline Avenue. The PVC membrane had separated at a seam near the kitchen exhaust vent. They heat-welded a patch and re-detailed the vent flashing. Solid work. Building manager was happy with the minimal disruption.

Ricardo Morales

Union City

We were considering buying a multi-family property on New York Avenue and needed a roof assessment. Their inspection revealed the flat roof had less than two years of life left — something the seller's disclosure didn't mention. That report saved us $20,000 in negotiation.

Catherine Reilly

Union City

Our apartment building on Boulevard East takes a beating from the Palisades wind. They installed a fully-adhered TPO system with extra fastening at the perimeter edges. Two winters now with zero issues. The crew knew exactly how to handle the wind exposure up here.

Diego Vargas

West New York

The parapet wall on our walk-up near Park Avenue was letting water behind the membrane. They rebuilt the parapet cap, installed new through-wall flashing, and re-terminated the membrane. Problem solved after years of patching by other contractors.

Sofia Petrov

West New York

During a December ice storm, the membrane on our flat roof split open and water poured into the top-floor apartment. They responded within two hours and got us sealed up before the next wave of freezing rain. Fast emergency work on a difficult night.

Omar Fayed

West New York

We manage several apartment buildings in West New York and enrolled them all in the maintenance program. The semi-annual inspections catch problems before our tenants notice anything. Drain cleaning alone has prevented multiple potential emergency calls.

Elena Romero

West New York

Our Harmon Cove townhouse roof was 30 years old and growing moss from all the Meadowlands humidity. They replaced it with algae-resistant architectural shingles and improved the ventilation. The HOA approved the color match and the installation was immaculate.

Kevin Brennan

Secaucus

They replaced the entire roof on our 25,000 sq ft warehouse near the Turnpike. Managed the project in phases so we never had to shut down operations. The new TPO system came with a 20-year manufacturer NDL warranty. Professional operation from start to finish.

Linda Tran

Secaucus

Had them inspect the roof on a Clarendon single-family home we were buying. Their report identified that the previous owner had layered new shingles over old ones — technically over code limit. We used that to negotiate the price down significantly.

Brian Sullivan

Secaucus

Our Millridge home had algae streaking all over the north-facing slope — a common problem near the Meadowlands. They cleaned the roof, replaced a few damaged shingles, and applied a zinc strip to prevent regrowth. Looks like a new roof.

Grace Park

Secaucus

Replaced the roof on our colonial near Gunnell Oval. The old roof was the original from when the house was built in the 1960s — way overdue. They did a clean tear-off, replaced about 15% of the decking, and installed a beautiful charcoal architectural shingle. Huge improvement.

Sean McCarthy

Kearny

Our industrial building in South Kearny near the marsh had a failing BUR roof. They installed a new EPDM system designed for the high-humidity environment with enhanced seam adhesion. No more leaks into the warehouse. The crew handled the large-scale project expertly.

Jennifer Andrade

Kearny

Ice dams damaged the eaves on our Cape Cod on Elm Street. They repaired the damaged fascia, replaced the affected shingles, and installed additional ice-and-water shield to prevent recurrence. Good work, though I wish ice dam prevention was included in the original assessment.

William Taylor

Kearny

Before listing our Passaic Avenue two-family for sale, we had them do a full roof inspection. Their report showed the roof was in good condition with 8-10 years remaining — which we included in the listing. Helped sell the property faster at asking price.

Rosa Gutierrez

Kearny

Our two-family on Harrison Avenue needed a new roof before we could refinance. They completed the replacement in three days — tear-off, decking repairs, new architectural shingles, and all new flashing. The bank appraiser was impressed with the quality.

Daniel Park

Harrison

We manage a new luxury building in the Waterfront District and had a warranty issue with the original roof contractor. Jersey City Quality Roofing came in, identified the membrane defects, documented everything for our warranty claim, and did the repair correctly.

Christine Alvarez

Harrison

Leak around the kitchen vent pipe on our older home near West Hudson Park. They replaced the pipe boot and the surrounding shingles. Quick, clean, and no more water stain spreading across the ceiling. Simple job done right.

Frank DiNapoli

Harrison

We needed a roof condition assessment for our building's reserve study near the PATH station. Their detailed report with photos and estimated replacement timeline gave our condo board exactly what we needed for long-term capital planning.

Yuki Tanaka

Harrison

Our two-family on Grant Avenue had the original roof from 1948. They navigated the tight streets with their equipment, did a careful tear-off given the shared walls with our neighbors, and installed a new roof that completely transformed the look of the house.

George Papadopoulos

East Newark

The shared-wall flashing between our row house and the neighbor's was leaking into both units. They coordinated with both homeowners, replaced the party wall flashing, and sealed everything properly. The kind of job that requires real row house experience.

Diane Wilson

East Newark

Had them inspect our small multi-family on Third Street before a planned renovation. Their report identified soft spots in the decking that we never would have found without pulling up the shingles. Changed our renovation budget significantly, but better to know now.

Joseph Medina

East Newark

A piece of the neighbor's aluminum siding flew off during a storm and punctured our flat roof membrane. Water was coming through the kitchen ceiling. They were here in 45 minutes and had the hole sealed before any serious damage to the interior.

Helen Stavros

East Newark

Our mid-rise apartment building on Park Avenue needed a complete flat roof replacement. The density in Guttenberg makes logistics a nightmare, but they managed material deliveries by crane and completed the TPO installation on schedule. Impressive project management.

Victor Petrosyan

Guttenberg

We're on the condo board for a Boulevard East building. Their maintenance program has been invaluable — the semi-annual inspections catch wind damage early before it turns into interior leaks. The annual reports help us budget for future capital improvements.

Margaret Kim

Guttenberg

Our mixed-use building had a persistent leak above the commercial space on the ground floor. They traced it to a deteriorated drain connection on the flat roof and replaced the entire drain assembly. Leak resolved. Getting equipment up to the roof in Guttenberg is always a challenge but they handled it.

Ivan Sokolov

Guttenberg

We needed a comprehensive roof assessment for all three buildings in our Galaxy Towers-adjacent complex. Their team inspected every section, mapped the moisture conditions, and gave us a prioritized 5-year replacement plan. The board voted to approve the maintenance contract on the spot.

Donna Cassidy

Guttenberg

Replacing the roof on our Victorian in the Heights was tricky — steep pitch, limited access from the narrow lot, and the wind exposure from being near the cliff edge. They handled every challenge and the new architectural shingles look amazing against the original trim.

Patrick Doyle

Weehawken

We needed emergency repair on a Lincoln Harbor commercial building where the membrane had blown up at the parapet during a windstorm. They were there the same day, secured the membrane, and scheduled the permanent repair for the following week. Responsive and competent.

Natasha Volkov

Weehawken

Our King Avenue townhouse had a leak at the skylight curb. They re-flashed the entire skylight and sealed the curb. It took longer than quoted because they found the decking around the skylight was soft, but they fixed it all and the leak is gone.

Mark Santangelo

Weehawken

Before purchasing our waterfront condo at Port Imperial, we wanted an independent assessment of the building's roof system. Their report confirmed the roof was in excellent condition with 15+ years remaining. It was exactly the peace of mind we needed for that investment.

Aisha Mohammed

Weehawken

Frequently Asked Questions About Roof Inspection in West New York

Town of West New York Building Department requires permits for most roofing work. Yes, a permit is required for roof inspection projects in West New York. The municipality follows 2021 IRC/IBC as adopted by NJ DCA with wind speed requirements of 115 mph per ASCE 7-22. Additional requirements include: high-rise roofing requires registered design professional sign-off.

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