Wall Township roofing, from the beach blocks to the horse farms
Paragon Exteriors is a family-run, licensed roofing and exteriors contractor (NJ HIC #13VH13814500) that replaces, repairs, and maintains roofs across Wall Township and coastal Monmouth County. Most Wall roofs get a complete tear-off and new wind-rated architectural shingles in a single day, with the Township permit filed for you and typical replacements running $8,500–$19,000. Estimates are free and itemized, financing is available, and the number is 848-633-6440.
At 31 square miles, Wall is one of the biggest municipalities in Monmouth County — and it refuses to weather like one town. A cape in West Belmar and a colonial backing up to Allaire State Park face completely different enemies, and a contractor who quotes them the same spec is guessing on at least one of them.
East side, west side: what attacks roofs where
| Section of Wall | Main threat | What we spec |
|---|---|---|
| West Belmar, Manasquan Park | Salt air and nor’easter gusts — the ocean is barely two miles out | 130 mph shingles, six-nail fastening, sealed edge detail |
| Glendola, New Bedford | Storm wind plus mature shade trees; 60s–80s attics that run hot | Algae-resistant shingles, ventilation corrected during the re-roof |
| Allenwood, Allaire, and the wooded west | Branch strikes, moss and algae streaking, gutters packed with debris | Impact checks after storms, algae-resistant shingles, gutter protection |
Geography stacks the deck on Wall’s east end: the Shark River to the north and the Manasquan River to the south form a corridor that pushes storm wind straight across the township whenever a nor’easter stalls offshore. West of the Parkway, the trees take over — heavy oak canopy that shades roofs into moss streaks and drops limbs in every serious blow. Our guide to shingles that survive the Shore covers exactly what we install for each exposure and why.
Roofs by era: what your street was built with
- Postwar capes and ranches in West Belmar and Manasquan Park — small, simple roofs, many now on their third shingle cycle, and usually the fastest, least expensive replacements in town
- 1960s–80s split-levels and colonials in Glendola and New Bedford — original soffit and ridge ventilation is often undersized, which cooks shingles from the attic side; we correct the airflow during the re-roof, not after
- 1990s–2000s colonials on wooded cul-de-sacs off Allaire Road and out toward the Howell line — big, cut-up rooflines full of valleys and dormers that punish lazy flashing work
One Wall-specific advantage of how we operate: every project gets drone documentation. On a heavily treed lot where you can’t see half your own roof from the ground, you get full aerial before-and-after photos — not a ladder-height guess and a handshake.
Every exterior trade, one crew
- Roof replacement in Wall Township — one-day tear-offs, permit handled with the Township’s Construction Department
- Roof repair — wind-lifted shingles, flashing leaks, and limb-strike damage
- Siding that holds its color against salt air on the east end
- Gutters and guards — non-negotiable maintenance under Wall’s tree canopy
- Windows and doors to tighten up drafty 60s–80s openings
- Storm damage response, including documentation your insurance adjuster will actually accept
The commercial side: Routes 34, 35, and 138
Wall’s commercial spine — the highway corridors and the business parks around Monmouth Executive Airport — sits under flat and low-slope roofs that fail differently than shingles: ponding, seam splits, and membranes baked past their service life. We handle commercial roofing throughout Wall; if you’re weighing membrane options for a building here, start with our flat roof guide for NJ commercial buildings.
Around Wall
Same crews, same spec, all around the neighborhood — we work Manasquan, Spring Lake, Howell, and Neptune constantly, often the same week we’re in Wall.