Clear quotes, careful roofers across McKinney & nearby.

Roofing in Downtown McKinney

Older homes, steeper pitches, and roofs with history around the square.

The blocks around the historic square carry McKinney's oldest roofs. They deserve roofers who respect that.

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Old-house roofs get a careful look before any number goes on paper.

Roofs with a century of history

The neighborhoods ringing the square are the city's oldest fabric: early-1900s Victorians and craftsman bungalows alongside mid-century infill. In the 75069 ZIP area that includes downtown, the housing stock is measurably older than the newer west side, with roughly one home in seven predating 1960 on the census record.

Old roofs are not just aged, they are layered with history: patched decking, retrofitted ventilation, sometimes long-gone materials underneath. Work here starts with understanding what is actually up there, and a careful inspection before quoting is not optional on a 1920s bungalow.

White home with brown shingle roof and attached two-car garage
Why us

Why downtown owners call here

Old-roof literacy

Decking surprises and past patch jobs get planned for, not discovered.

Character-conscious choices

Profiles and colors that fit a historic street, not fight it.

Ventilation upgrades

Many older attics near the square still run on mid-century airflow.

Downtown McKinney roofing questions

What owners of older homes near the square ask.

Close enough to honor the street. True slate or wood-shingle looks now come in modern materials, designer asphalt and standing seam included, that read right on a period home and hold up to Collin County hail far better than the originals did.
Often somewhat: steeper pitches, more detail work, and the real possibility of decking repairs found under tear-off. The estimate prices what the inspection can see and states plainly what tear-off might reveal, so surprises are budgeted, not sprung.
The census data for the 75069 ZIP area, which takes in downtown and the east side, shows a median build year of 1998 with about 14 percent of homes predating 1960, older than McKinney's western half by a wide margin. Street by street around the square, the historic share runs much higher.
Permit rules in Texas are set city by city, and McKinney has its own requirements plus historic-district considerations near the square. The roofer confirms both with the city before work starts; the permit rundown covers the basics.
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Give an old roof an honest read.

A careful inspection and an itemized estimate, scoped for what historic homes actually hide.

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