Drone view of townhouse row with curling three-tab shingles, moss along shared valleys, and a tarp over a dormer — mid-failure roofline before replacement
Before

Brookfield Commons — 14 Units

Oct 2024 · Leak reports: 6 units · 19-yr shingles

Drone view of same townhouse row after roof replacement — clean architectural shingles running unbroken across six units, copper drip edge catching light, gutters aligned
After

Brookfield Commons — 14 Units

Mar 2025 · GAF Timberline HDZ · 9 days total

RIDGELINE

Multi-Unit Roofing
for HOAs & Condos

Assess Your Roof
RIDGELINE

Multi-Unit Roofing for HOAs & Condos

Assess Your Roof

Why shared rooflines
demand different crews

A single-family replacement is one drainage plane. A townhouse row is six connected planes sharing valleys, gutters, and fire-rated assemblies at every party wall. One failed detail affects every neighbor.

UNIT 1UNIT 2UNIT 3UNIT 4SheathingUnderlaymentParty Wall
  • Structural Sheathing

    OSB or plank decking spans party walls — damage in one unit telegraphs to neighbors

  • Self-Adhered Underlayment

    Ice-and-water shield at every valley, eave, and penetration — the last line before a leak claim

  • Fire-Rated Assembly

    Zero-lot-line buildings require Class A assemblies at shared walls — single-family crews miss this

  • Staggered Replacement

    Phased by building, not by unit — keeps reserve fund drawdowns predictable for your board

Roofing crew rolling self-adhered underlayment across sheathing on a townhouse row, showing proper installation technique at the shared valley

Ice-and-water shield extends 24″ beyond every interior wall — including party walls. Standard 36″ eave coverage isn't enough when two units share a valley.

Step-and-kick flashing
at the party wall

The joint where two units meet is the single most common failure point in multi-unit roofing. Most crews treat it like a skylight flashing. It isn't.

Close-up of failed step flashing at a party wall — caulk-filled gap, lifted metal, rust staining on sheathing visible beneath
✕ Incorrect

Common failure pattern

Caulk-filled gap + surface-nailed step flashing. Water infiltrates behind the wall in the first freeze-thaw cycle. By year three, the sheathing at both units is compromised.

✓ Ridgeline Standard

Four-piece step-and-kick.
No caulk. No exceptions.

Every party-wall transition gets individual step pieces interwoven with courses, a continuous kick flashing at the base, and a counter-flashing cap locked into the mortar joint. The assembly sheds water mechanically — not chemically.

  • Interwoven step pieces

    One per shingle course, face-nailed above the waterline

  • Continuous kick flashing

    Extends 4″ onto the wall, 4″ onto the roof deck

  • Counter-flashing cap

    Mechanically locked into raked mortar joint — not surface-adhered

  • Zero-caulk zones

    All joints rely on laps and locks, not sealant chemistry

KICK FLASHINGSTEP PIECESCOUNTERFLASHINGMORTAR JOINT

Built for the board
vote, not just the roof

HOA projects fail at the board table, not on the roof. We bring every document, projection, and compliance detail needed to pass a vote on the first try.

01Board-Ready

Reserve Study Review

We read your existing reserve study — or help you commission one. Replacement cost projections align with your fund drawdown schedule, not ours.

02HOA Compliance

Board Presentation Package

Drone photos, condition report, phased cost breakdown, and a vote-ready resolution. Everything a board needs to approve in one meeting.

03Zero Disruption

Phased Replacement Schedule

Buildings replaced by structure, not by who complained loudest. Residents receive 72-hour notice. Work windows respect quiet hours in CC&Rs.

04Documented

Manufacturer Warranty + Closeout

GAF System Plus or Owens Corning Platinum warranty registered to the HOA. Lien waivers and close-out documentation delivered within 5 business days.

340+Units replaced since 2019
14HOA boards served
9 daysAvg. completion per building
$0Reserve fund overruns
Start Roof Assessment

Assess Your Roof's
Condition

Five questions. No typing required. By the time you finish, you'll understand your roof better than you did sixty seconds ago.

Roof Risk Assessment

Answer five quick questions about your building. We'll calculate your Roof Risk Grade and give you a tailored recommendation — free, no strings.

5 questions ~60 seconds No account needed Instant result

No account required · No spam · Results are educational, not contractual