Roof and envelope
Help visitors connect roof damage to water intrusion risk.
Storm Damage Restoration
Storm losses can involve roof openings, siding damage, water intrusion, tree impact, and temporary protection needs. Documentation helps separate urgent stabilization from permanent repair scope.
Restoration guidance
This page focuses on roof exposure, siding, gutters, broken openings, water intrusion, temporary protection, and claim documentation.
Help visitors connect roof damage to water intrusion risk.
Separate structural concerns from cleanup and documentation.
Link storm damage to roof tarping, board-up, and water mitigation.
Encourage wide, close, exterior, and interior photos when safe.
This service page explains roofing, siding, gutters, windows, masonry, interiors, garages, basements, and exterior openings.
The process includes temporary protection, exterior and interior documentation, affected-room mapping, estimate preparation, scope review, and repair coordination.
Do not climb onto a roof after a storm. Avoid downed wires, unstable tree limbs, broken glass, and ceilings that may be holding water.
Documentation should include photos, affected-room notes, measurements, moisture readings when relevant, emergency service records, and rebuild scope separated from mitigation.
Process
Emergency call and safety review.
Stabilization or mitigation.
Documentation and room-by-room scope notes.
Xactimate-compatible estimate site files when applicable.
Restoration, rebuild, and final walkthrough.
Project Gallery Ready
These slots are prepared with descriptive alt-text guidance and do not use fake before-and-after claims.
Questions and Answers
Temporary protection may be needed when the roof, windows, doors, siding, or other envelope areas are open to weather or creating additional damage risk.
Fire and Storm Restoration
Emergency stabilization, standards-informed mitigation, insurance-ready documentation, and restoration scope support for Chicagoland properties.