A city of different roof decisions
Growth does not make Post Falls homes interchangeable.
A compact neighborhood roof, a home with several additions, an exposed edge property, and a larger custom residence can have very different access, geometry, drainage, ventilation, and finish priorities. Build year is useful context, but it does not replace observation of the roof that is actually present.
Replacement becomes a responsible conversation when condition is broad enough that repeated localized work no longer protects the home or the budget. That decision can be influenced by material wear, recurring water entry, multiple interacting failures, deck concerns, aging flashings, ventilation changes, and the homeowner’s long-range plan. Ketron should explain which evidence moves the recommendation beyond repair or care.
Once replacement is justified, the proposal should make competing bids comparable. “New roof” is not a complete scope. Homeowners deserve to see what is removed, how unknown decking is handled, what underlayment and material are specified, how valleys and wall intersections are treated, how ventilation is addressed, and what property protection and cleanup mean in practice.