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A roof that holds up in Parkside has to survive more than just rain. It has to handle 115-degree summers, monsoon microbursts that can push 70-plus mph winds, and UV exposure that breaks down lesser materials in years, not decades. When the job is done right, you stop watching the ceiling every July and start trusting that the biggest asset you own is actually protected.
For homes in Parkside, there’s another layer most roofers don’t account for: the Anthem Parkside Community Association requires Design Review Committee approval before any exterior work begins. That means materials have to match what the original Del Webb construction specified, and the approval process has to happen before a single shingle or tile is touched. When we know this going in, the project moves without HOA violations, without delays, and without the cost of redoing work that didn’t meet design guidelines.
The original Anthem buildout ran from 1999 through roughly 2008. That means a significant portion of Parkside’s 7,229 homes are now sitting on roofs that are 17 to 26 years old — right at or past the expected service life for materials in Arizona’s climate. The difference between catching that now and waiting is often the difference between a repair and a full replacement. Getting ahead of it protects your home’s value and your ability to pass a pre-sale inspection when the time comes.
We were established in Maricopa County in 1999 — the same year Del Webb broke ground on what would become Anthem. We’ve been watching Arizona roofs age, fail, and get replaced in this specific climate longer than most competitors have been in business at all. That experience translates directly to how we approach every Parkside roof we work on.
We hold a Certified Master Roofer designation, which goes beyond the ROC license every Arizona contractor is required to carry. It’s an examined credential that reflects a higher standard of expertise — one that no other roofing contractor actively serving Parkside currently advertises. Combined with our 25-year written workmanship warranty and thermal imaging technology for hidden moisture detection, the difference between what we offer and a contractor who showed up after last monsoon season is significant and verifiable.
We serve homeowners across Parkside’s sub-neighborhoods — from the patio homes along Paseo to the larger two-story builds in Arroyo Grande and The Landing — bringing the kind of local familiarity that only comes from years of actual work in the area.
It starts with a thorough inspection — not a quick visual scan from the driveway. We use thermal imaging to identify moisture intrusion and underlayment failure that isn’t visible to the naked eye. In a community like Parkside where original roofing materials are now approaching or past their desert-climate service life, this step matters. A tile that looks fine from the ground can be sitting on compromised underlayment that’s been failing for two years. Catching it early changes the scope and the cost of the fix.
Once the inspection is complete, you get a clear, itemized breakdown of what was found and what’s needed — repair, maintenance, or full replacement. If you’re in the western portion of Parkside, permits run through the City of Phoenix Building Services Department. If you’re on the east side of I-17, that’s Maricopa County. We know the difference and handle the correct permit process for your specific address. Before any exterior work begins, we handle the APCA Design Review Committee submission so your project stays compliant with community guidelines from day one.
From there, the work gets scheduled and completed with materials rated for Arizona’s heat and UV load — not generic installs that hold up fine in other climates but degrade prematurely here. When the job is done, you get documentation of the work completed, warranty information in writing, and a roof you don’t have to think about heading into monsoon season.
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Tile roofing is the dominant material across Anthem’s planned-community housing stock, and for good reason — done correctly, a tile roof can last 40 to 50 years even in Arizona’s climate. The catch is that the underlayment beneath the tile doesn’t last nearly as long. In homes built during the original Anthem buildout, that underlayment is now reaching end-of-life, and it’s one of the most common causes of leaks in Parkside that homeowners mistake for cracked tiles. We handle tile repair and full replacement, matching existing profiles to keep your home in line with APCA design standards.
Beyond tile, we offer the full range of residential and commercial roofing services including flat roofing, TPO systems, metal roofing, shingle roofing, foam roofing, roof coatings, skylights, and emergency repair. Flat and foam roofing systems require particular attention in Anthem’s heat — foam roofing needs periodic recoating to maintain its UV-protective layer, and the summer sun accelerates that timeline significantly. If your home has solar panels, roof replacement requires coordinated removal and reinstallation, which we factor into the project scope from the start.
For homeowners dealing with storm damage after a monsoon event, we provide insurance claim assistance as part of our service — not an add-on. We document damage accurately, communicate with adjusters, and help you navigate the claims process so you get the coverage you’re entitled to. Financing is also available for homeowners who prefer to manage the cost over time rather than absorb a large unplanned expense all at once.
Yes — and this is one of the most important things to understand before hiring any roofing contractor in Parkside. The Anthem Parkside Community Association requires Design Review Committee approval for all exterior modifications, including roofing work. That approval has to happen before work begins, not after. The replacement materials also need to meet or exceed the standards set by the original Del Webb construction, which means matching tile profiles, colors, and specifications that align with the community’s design guidelines.
A contractor who doesn’t know this process will either skip it — leaving you exposed to HOA violations and potential fines — or cause project delays while they figure it out mid-job. We’re familiar with the APCA approval workflow and handle the DRC submission as part of the project, so your roof gets replaced without creating an entirely separate problem with your community association on top of it.
It depends on the material, but the honest answer is shorter than most manufacturers’ ratings suggest when you factor in Arizona’s specific conditions. Asphalt shingles that might last 25 to 30 years in a moderate climate typically hold up 15 to 20 years in the Phoenix metro area due to sustained UV exposure and the thermal expansion and contraction that happens when temperatures swing from below freezing on winter nights to 115 degrees in summer. That daily and seasonal cycling stresses fasteners, seams, and flashing in ways that just don’t happen in other parts of the country.
Tile roofing holds up better — quality tile can last 40 to 50 years — but the underlayment beneath it has a much shorter lifespan. In Parkside, where the original Anthem homes were built between 1999 and 2008, a lot of that underlayment is now at or past the point where it should be inspected and likely replaced, even if the tile itself still looks intact. If your home is from that original buildout, that’s the first thing worth having checked.
Tile — concrete or clay — is the standard for Anthem’s planned-community housing stock and for good reason. It holds up to Arizona’s UV load better than asphalt, it fits the community’s aesthetic, and it aligns with APCA design guidelines. When tile is installed correctly and maintained, it’s one of the most durable roofing options available in this climate. The key word is maintained — cracked tiles from thermal cycling need to be caught and replaced before water gets underneath them and compromises the underlayment.
For flat or low-slope sections of a home, TPO and foam roofing systems are common in the area. Foam roofing in particular is effective in Arizona’s heat when it’s properly maintained, but it requires recoating every five to ten years to preserve the UV-protective layer. Skip that window and the foam degrades quickly under Anthem’s summer sun. Metal roofing is also a strong option for energy efficiency — reflective metal roofing can meaningfully reduce cooling costs, which matters in a community where air conditioning runs for six or more months a year.
The range is wide because Parkside’s housing stock varies significantly — from smaller patio homes in Paseo at around 1,100 square feet to large two-story builds in Arroyo Grande and The Landing that exceed 4,000 square feet. For a tile roof replacement on a mid-size Parkside home, you’re generally looking at somewhere in the $15,000 to $36,000 range depending on the size, pitch, complexity, and whether the underlayment needs replacement alongside the tile. Shingle replacements tend to run lower, typically in the $7,000 to $14,000 range for comparable square footage.
What drives cost up beyond square footage is usually the condition of what’s underneath — if the underlayment, decking, or flashing has deteriorated, that adds to the scope. A thorough inspection, including thermal imaging to catch hidden moisture, gives you an accurate picture before any numbers are committed to. Getting a detailed, itemized quote rather than a ballpark figure is the right way to approach this — it tells you exactly what you’re paying for and why.
The first priority is stopping active water intrusion. If you have a visible breach — missing tiles, torn flashing, a section of roof that took wind damage — getting it professionally tarped before the next storm is critical. Arizona’s monsoon season runs July through September, and back-to-back storm events are common. A temporary tarp installed correctly by someone with the right equipment buys you time to get a proper inspection and insurance claim started without additional interior damage piling up.
After the immediate situation is stabilized, document everything before any cleanup happens. Photos and video of the damage — both on the roof and inside the home — are what your insurance adjuster needs to process the claim. We assist with that documentation and communicate directly with adjusters, which matters because knowing how to present storm damage in a way that’s complete and accurate affects what your claim covers. In Anthem, where monsoon microbursts can be severe and localized, having a contractor who has navigated this process many times is worth more than it sounds.
The honest answer is that you usually can’t tell from the ground, and even a basic visual inspection from the roof surface doesn’t always catch what’s actually failing. In Parkside’s original housing stock — homes built during the 1999 to 2008 Del Webb buildout — the most common scenario is tile that looks acceptable on the surface but sits on underlayment that has quietly been degrading for years under Arizona’s UV load. By the time water shows up inside the home, the underlayment has often been compromised for a while.
Thermal imaging changes that equation. By identifying hidden moisture and heat signatures that visual inspection misses, it gives you a real picture of what’s happening beneath the surface before you commit to a repair scope. Sometimes what looks like a repair situation is actually a replacement — and knowing that upfront saves you from paying for a repair that fails in two years because the underlying issue wasn’t addressed. The inspection is where the honest answer comes from, and it’s the right place to start before any other decision gets made.
Other Services we provide in Parkside