Quincy roofing is city roofing: triple-deckers in Wollaston and North Quincy, dense two-family streets, flat-roofed commercial blocks, and coastal single-families out along Houghs Neck, Merrymount, and Squantum taking wind straight off the bay. It’s a different job than roofing a colonial on a cul-de-sac, and it rewards a contractor with a big enough crew and enough kinds of expertise to handle whatever the building is. That’s been us for 30-plus years.

Triple-deckers and multi-family roofs

A lot of Quincy’s housing carries either a true flat roof or a shallow-pitch roof that shingles were never meant for. We install fully-adhered EPDM rubber and TPO membrane systems on these, with proper tapered drainage where ponding has been chronic — ponding is what actually kills city flat roofs, and it doesn’t fix itself. For owners and landlords we sequence tear-offs so tenants keep access, protect the property below, and document everything for the building file. Rooftop details matter on these buildings: parapet caps, chimney counter-flashing, and vent stacks are where most triple-decker leaks start, and where our quotes get specific.

Coastal Quincy is still coastal

Squantum, Houghs Neck, and the shore-facing streets of Merrymount get real marine wind, so single-family replacements there receive the same high-wind fastening and sealed-edge treatment we use in Scituate and Hull. Inland, Quincy’s older housing stock frequently hides multiple roofing layers — we tear off to the deck every time, because covering over two existing layers is how you buy a wavy, short-lived roof and a bigger bill later.

For property owners and managers: we’re set up for portfolio work — consistent crews, documented scopes, and a single point of contact. Ask about pricing multiple buildings in one mobilization.