Commercial Roof Work
Storm Damage Roof Repair & Insurance Claims with scope notes, photos, and next steps.
Fort Lauderdale's commercial market spans the I-595 and I-95 industrial belts, the Las Olas retail and mixed-use corridor, the Cypress Creek employment zone, and the Dania Beach and Miramar logistics hubs. Storm damage documentation and insurance claim roofing in this market requires a contractor who can produce GPS-tagged hail impact maps, wind damage assessments, and supplemental claim documentation in the format that commercial property adjusters use — not just a repair estimate, but the evidence package that gets the claim approved at full scope.
Storm damage roof repair and insurance claims in Fort Lauderdale, FL require documentation at a precision that standard repair work doesn't. A successful commercial insurance claim starts with a damage assessment that identifies hail impact density, wind-related membrane displacement, flashing damage, and equipment damage — all documented with GPS-tagged photography, impact measurements, and a written assessment formatted for the insurance adjuster processing the claim. We've worked with commercial property insurers and public adjusters throughout FL and know what documentation gets claims approved.
Hail damage to commercial TPO and PVC roofing membranes in Fort Lauderdale is not always visible to the naked eye at ground level, and it's often missed in cursory roof walkovers by adjusters who don't specialize in commercial roofing. Hail impact patterns create membrane fatigue that accelerates seam failure and UV degradation — the visible effect appears months or years after the storm, not immediately. We document hail impact density with close-range photography and, where needed, thermal imaging that reveals subsurface impact damage. That documentation is the basis for a complete claim.
Wind damage claims at commercial properties in Fort Lauderdale typically involve membrane displacement or blow-off at laps, flashings, and edge metal — the first areas to fail under sustained wind load. We document the displacement pattern, confirm the failure mode (installation vs. weather-related), and provide a written assessment that distinguishes storm-related damage from pre-existing conditions. That distinction is critical to claim approval, and our documentation makes it clearly.
Once a claim is approved, we work within the insurance settlement to deliver the approved scope. If the approved settlement is below the documented repair cost — which is common after events where multiple contractors are competing for claims — we provide supplemental documentation and work directly with your adjuster to close the gap. We don't ask property owners to absorb shortfalls that result from incomplete initial documentation.
