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Evesham Roofing, Chimney & Gutter Services in Burlington County, NJ

Evesham filled its old farmland with big Marlton colonials and long townhome runs, and the first architectural-shingle roofs those subdivisions came with are now old enough that the flashing details decide how the next fifteen years go.

Population

~46,000

Response

90–110 minutes

Roofing in Evesham

Evesham Township is really Marlton to anyone who lives here, and Marlton is what happened when the farms along Route 70 and Route 73 were carved into one colonial neighborhood after another. The township's population roughly tripled between 1970 and 2000, and most of what got built is large-footprint two-story colonial: a wide gable roof broken up by dormers, a garage wing that ties back into the main house, and a masonry chimney sitting somewhere out on the slope. A roof that size is not one plane you can read from the street. It is a set of valleys, sidewalls, and roof-to-wall junctions, and it is at those junctions that leaks begin long before the shingles themselves wear out.

Marlton also went heavy on attached housing. Planned communities like Kings Grant fold in whole runs of townhomes such as Kings Mill and Walden Glen, where a single roofline can span four, six, or eight units under one continuous stretch of shingles. That layout changes the math. The valley between two offset units carries the runoff from both, and the flashing along a party wall has to keep one owner's water out of the neighbor's ceiling. When only part of a building gets re-roofed, the tie-in seam where new shingles meet old is the spot to watch, because that is where two different roof ages are forced to share one drainage line.

The thing most Marlton neighborhoods have in common, though, is age. The architectural shingles that went on during the building booms of the 1980s, 90s, and early 2000s are first-generation laminates, and plenty of them are now past the point where the mat stays flexible and the sealant strips still grip. Add the mature tree canopy over places like Marlton Lakes, and the shaded, slow-drying north slopes it creates, and you get algae streaking, moss, and leaf litter collecting in the valleys through the wet months. The larger South Jersey work is what draws a crew this far from North Jersey — full tear-offs, townhome buildings, and multi-slope colonials. What we will not do is price a roof we have not walked.

Lake-Community Colonials and Townhome Rooflines

Marlton Lakes is a private community of a few hundred homes built mostly from the late 1960s through the 70s, wrapped around Upper Marlton Lake and the smaller lakes beside it. The houses sit under heavy tree cover, and many are on their second roof already. On a lakeside lot the constant is moisture: north-facing and lake-facing slopes dry slowly, so that is where the black algae stains show first and the moss creeps up from the eaves. The details that decide these older roofs are the pipe boots, whose rubber collars crack and split on roughly the same clock as a shingle layer, and the step flashing behind the dormers and chimney, which was often the original galvanized and has been quietly corroding under the courses for two decades.

The Kings Grant side of Marlton is a different animal. It is a large planned community built around its own lake, mixing single-family homes with townhome clusters, and the townhome roofs are the ones that tend to get overlooked. A continuous run of units shares valleys, ridge venting, and sometimes a single drainage path off the back, so a problem that starts over one unit does not stay there. On those buildings we look hard at the counter-flashing where the roof meets the taller party-wall sections, the kick-out flashing at the end of each roof edge that keeps runoff off the siding, and whether the ridge vent that has to breathe for the whole run is actually still open. Getting those right is what keeps a townhome roof from turning into an argument between neighbors.

Burlington County Weather & Wear

Burlington gets milder winters than the north but plenty of summer thunderstorm and hail activity. Pine Barrens properties have unique tree-debris and pitch-resin challenges.

Services for Evesham Homes

Every Tri-State service is available to Evesham homeowners. Click any service for the full scope and pricing details.

Roofing Materials We Install in Evesham

Different Evesham homes need different roof systems. Here are the material tiers we install most often in this part of Burlington County — picked based on the housing stock, climate exposure, and the kind of work Evesham homeowners actually ask us for.

Architectural Asphalt Shingle

Best value for most NJ homes

Designer / Luxury Asphalt

Upgraded curb appeal + longer warranty

Cedar Shake & Shingle

Natural look for historic homes

Standing-Seam Metal

Lifetime roof for steep pitches

Slate & Synthetic Slate

Premium, lifetime, often required

Compare roofing materials, costs & lifespans

How Your Evesham Roof Project Runs

Every job follows the same five steps, from the first call to the final magnetic nail sweep:

  1. 1Free on-site inspection
  2. 2Written estimate with photos
  3. 3Material delivery and crew dispatch
  4. 4Tear-off, deck inspection, and install
  5. 5Final walkthrough and warranty registration

Start with a free Evesham roof inspection

Common Evesham Roof Problems We Fix

Patterns we see again and again on Evesham roofs — most driven by the local housing stock and Burlington County climate. If any of these sound familiar, give us a call for a free on-site assessment.

  • Chimney saddles on the wide colonials: a masonry chimney parked out on the slope needs a proper cricket to split the water around its uphill side, and on many Marlton houses that saddle is undersized or missing, so leaf pack and ice build against the brick.
  • Step and counter-flashing at the garage-to-house and dormer walls, the standard weak point on Marlton's two-story colonials, where a roof plane dies into a vertical wall and the original metal was nailed flat to the wall face and caulked over rather than layered course by course behind the shingles.
  • Townhome tie-in seams in communities like Kings Grant, where one owner re-roofs and the neighbor holds off; the joint between new and aging shingles, and the shared valley just below it, is where the callbacks come from.
  • Kick-out (diverter) flashing over the front entries of garage-forward colonials, absent on a surprising number of them, letting a full slope of runoff sheet down the sidewall and quietly rot the trim and sheathing behind it.
  • North- and lake-facing slopes under the Marlton Lakes and Kings Grant canopy: slow-drying shingles that grow algae and moss, and valleys that stay packed with leaf litter and hold water against the shingle edges.

Coverage in Evesham

We serve this part of New Jersey for roofing, chimney, and full replacement work. We're a North Jersey-based company, so we plan South Jersey jobs deliberately rather than promising same-day service — but the crews, the materials, and the written workmanship warranty are the same wherever the job is.

Call (201) 779-3961 and we'll confirm exactly when we can be at your Evesham property.

Nearby Burlington County Cities

We take on projects across Burlington County as a North Jersey-based contractor — scoped and scheduled deliberately rather than promised same-day. It's the same crew, the same materials, and the same written workmanship warranty wherever the job is.

See full Burlington County service area