TruePeak Roofing

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About

TruePeak Roofing operates from El Cajon Boulevard in College Area, San Diego, positioned on the east-west commercial corridor that runs through the heart of the 92115 ZIP. The surrounding blocks between SDSU and the Rolando border contain a dense mix of 1950s ranch homes, 1970s apartment complexes, and converted commercial buildings that present a cross-section of residential and small-commercial roofing conditions. Structural engineering review is part of the scope on older buildings where roof-load calculations must account for added layers, HVAC equipment weight, or future solar-panel installations, and TruePeak sources stamped structural plans through Schall Architects for permit-ready documentation. Composition-shingle replacement on the neighborhood's hip-and-gable residential roofs follows a full tearoff-to-deck protocol: strip existing layers, inspect and replace damaged plywood, install synthetic underlayment with self-adhering membrane at valleys and eaves, and lay new dimensional shingles with hand-nailing at high-wind zones. El Cajon Boulevard's commercial properties include flat-roofed retail strips and mixed-use buildings where single-ply TPO or modified-bitumen systems require periodic recoating and seam-welding maintenance to prevent ponding leaks above occupied tenant spaces. San Diego's building department requires a roofing permit for any re-roof project, and the contractor pulls permits, schedules the required inspections, and closes out the final sign-off with the City before the homeowner takes delivery of the warranty paperwork. Tearoff debris from a full residential re-roof produces three to five tons of waste shingles, underlayment, and flashing material that must be sorted and hauled to a licensed disposal facility, a logistics step San Diego Hauling & Demo manages for TruePeak's larger projects. The El Cajon Boulevard location gives TruePeak direct access to the College Area housing stock within a two-mile radius of SDSU, where aging roofs on rental properties and owner-occupied homes generate a steady volume of repair and replacement work.