Residential Fence Installation and Repair

Roof Technologies

Fences Built to Take the Weather

New cedar privacy fence along a Colorado residential backyard

A fence is the part of your property that takes the most wind, the most UV, and the most direct hail — and it is usually the first thing to show age. We build new fences, repair storm-damaged ones, and replace sections that rot out at the post. Most of our fence work happens alongside a roof or siding project, so we are already on site with the crew and the dumpster.

Materials We Install

We pick the material to match the yard, the HOA rules, and what you actually want to spend maintaining over the next 20 years. A few honest tradeoffs:

  • Western red cedar. Still the best-looking privacy fence on the market. Expect to stain or seal every 3–5 years in Colorado sun, longer in shaded Kansas yards. We set posts in concrete below the frost line and use stainless or hot-dipped galvanized fasteners so the boards don’t bleed rust.
  • Composite (Trex, TimberTech, and similar). Higher up-front cost, almost no maintenance, color stays consistent. Good fit for front-facing fences and HOA neighborhoods where uniformity matters.
  • Vinyl. Clean look, never needs paint. We use heavier-gauge panels because the light stuff cracks when a branch drops on it in an ice storm.
  • Aluminum and ornamental steel. Around pools, along driveways, and for view-preserving perimeters. Powder-coated, rackable for sloped yards.
  • Chain-link. Dog runs, back-lot boundaries, utility enclosures. Galvanized or vinyl-coated, with tension bands and line posts sized for Colorado wind loads.

Storm and Hail Damage Repair

High wind on the Front Range and across the Kansas plains regularly knocks down fence sections, and hail that dents gutters and siding also shreds vinyl panels and pocks painted steel. If a storm took down part of your fence, we can work the repair into an existing insurance claim or write it as a standalone scope.

  • Insurance documentation. We photograph damage, itemize affected sections, and write a scope your adjuster can work from.
  • Match-existing repairs. Where the rest of the fence has life left in it, we source matching boards, pickets, or panels and blend new work into old so you are not replacing 200 feet of fence to fix 40.
  • Post-only rebuilds. When the boards are fine but the posts have rotted at grade, we pull the posts, reset in concrete, and reuse the existing fabric.

Gates, Hardware, and the Parts That Actually Fail

Most fence service calls are gate problems. Gates sag, latches stop lining up, self-closing hinges wear out. We use heavy-duty hardware rated for the gate weight — not the builder-grade stuff that comes in a blister pack — and we build gates with diagonal bracing or steel frames so they stay square.

  • Heavy-gauge hinges and latches rated for actual gate weight, not wishful thinking.
  • Drop rods, cane bolts, and double-gate hardware for driveway and RV access.
  • Keyed locks and keypad latches where you need them.

What to Expect from the Job

On a typical residential fence replacement we locate utilities, pull the old fence, set posts, let concrete cure, then hang panels or boards. Most yards are done in two to four working days. We haul off the old fence, leave the grass as intact as we can, and walk the line with you before we leave.

Schedule a Fence Estimate

If you need a new fence, a storm repair, or just a few sections replaced to match what you already have, we will come out, measure, and write you a straight estimate.

Call us at 855 ROOF-001, email info [at] rooftechnologies.com, or submit a request through our contact form to schedule a fence site visit.

Still have questions? Contact us


Roof Technologies

Fence Installation & Repair FAQ

Common questions about fence installation, repair, and storm-damage claims in Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and Wyoming.