Riverview, Michigan — Wayne County
Repair and replacement of the wood and trim your gutters hang from — stopping rot, sealing pest entries, and restoring proper attic ventilation.
Riverview is a quiet Downriver community where most homes date to the same few building booms — which means a lot of gutters aging out at the same time. We provide soffit & fascia repair throughout Riverview — including near Riverview Highlands, the Fort Street corridor, the Pennsylvania Road area and central Riverview — and about 25 minutes from our Garden City shop.
The city is largely 1950s–1970s ranches plus pockets of newer colonials, most with straightforward rooflines that make seamless replacement fast — the typical Riverview home is a one-day job for us. On homes of that vintage, the fascia board behind the gutter has often been wet for years before anyone notices — peeling paint and soft wood at the roof edge are the giveaways.
In Riverview we repair or replace rotted fascia and soffit, wrap it in low-maintenance aluminum color-matched to your trim, and restore the ventilation your attic needs. Solid fascia is also the foundation of any gutter job: new gutters screwed into soft wood won't stay up, which is why we always inspect it before hanging anything.
Yes — Riverview (48193) is part of our core service area, and about 25 minutes from our Garden City shop. We serve near Riverview Highlands, the Fort Street corridor, the Pennsylvania Road area and central Riverview. Call (248) 561-7790 or request a free estimate online.
Usually within the same week — about 25 minutes from our Garden City shop. Estimates are free, take about 20–30 minutes, and you'll get a real price on the spot, not a range that changes later.
Peeling paint, soft or crumbling wood behind the gutter, water stains on the soffit, or gutters pulling away from the house are the usual signs. If a gutter is sagging, the fascia behind it is often the real problem.
Yes — we can remove your gutters, repair or replace the fascia behind them, and re-hang the same gutters if they're still in good shape. If both are at end of life, doing them together saves money.
Blocked or rotted soffits trap warm, moist air in the attic. In winter that melts roof snow unevenly and feeds ice dams; in summer it cooks your shingles. Healthy vented soffit protects the whole roof system.