Useful intake
The form asks for the details that shape a real next step.
Honest scope
Repair recommendations depend on source, condition, access, and materials.
Connecticut focus
Pages are organized around local property damage and repair decisions.
What this service solves
Soft, swollen, cracked, or failing exterior wood.
Inspection items that need repair before sale.
Water source or paint failure that keeps damaging the same area.
Common projects
Trim replacement
Deck and porch board repair
Fascia and soffit repair
Pre-sale exterior punch lists
Options and approaches
Like-for-like wood
PVC or composite alternatives where appropriate
Localized repair or larger replacement scope
Our process
Review the source of damage, affected materials, photos, and whether mitigation or specialty testing is already complete.
Separate urgent safety or moisture concerns from repair work that can be scoped after the property is stable.
Build a repair plan around the rooms, finishes, access constraints, and documentation needed for the next decision.
Confirm scope before work starts so the homeowner understands what is being repaired, replaced, or coordinated.
Cost factors
Material type
Access
Hidden damage once trim is opened
Paint or finish work
Timeline factors
Weather
Discovery of hidden rot
Paint drying conditions
Maintenance and care
Keep water away from wood joints
Maintain paint film
Repair small failures before they spread
FAQs
Is rotted wood always an insurance issue?
Wear, age, and maintenance-related rot are often not insurance work; the scope depends on the cause and policy.
Should I choose PVC instead of wood?
PVC can help in weather-exposed trim areas, but the right material depends on location, appearance, and budget.
Request a project review
Share what happened, where the property is, and how to reach you. The request is saved to the operational backend so it can be reviewed instead of disappearing behind a fake success message.
