Hear from Our Customers
You’ve noticed the cracks. Maybe water’s getting in where it shouldn’t. Or your heating bills keep climbing even though you’re not using more energy than usual.
That’s what happens when siding stops doing its job. It’s not just about how your home looks from the street. It’s about what’s happening behind those panels when a nor’easter rolls through or when temperatures swing forty degrees in a week.
New siding means you stop patching problems and start preventing them. Your home stays dry during storms. Your HVAC system doesn’t work overtime fighting drafts. And when you’re ready to sell, buyers see a home that’s been maintained, not one that’s been neglected.
The right siding installation in Lexington, MA handles moisture before it becomes mold. It cuts energy waste before it shows up on your bill. And it protects your investment without requiring you to repaint every few years.
We’ve handled exterior home remodeling in Lexington since the beginning. We know what happens to siding when homes built in the 1960s face today’s weather patterns. We’ve seen what works and what fails after ten Massachusetts winters.
You’re not getting a crew that learned siding installation last month. You’re working with contractors who understand fiber cement performance in coastal climates and know why proper house wrap matters more here than in drier states.
Lexington homeowners deal with specific challenges. Homes in this area face salt air exposure, extreme temperature swings, and storms that test every seam and corner. We install siding that accounts for those conditions, not generic solutions that look good in a brochure but fail in year three.
First, we look at your current siding and identify what’s actually wrong. Not what might be wrong or could be wrong. We check for moisture damage, structural issues, and whether your home has proper insulation and weather barriers underneath.
Then we give you a transparent estimate. You’ll know what materials we’re using, why we’re recommending them for your specific situation, and what the timeline looks like. If you’re buying the materials yourself, we provide the exact specifications so there’s no guesswork.
Installation starts with proper prep work. We remove old siding carefully, address any underlying issues with sheathing or moisture barriers, and install new house wrap if needed. Then we install your new siding with attention to proper flashing, corner details, and ventilation. Every seam matters when you’re protecting a home worth nearly two million dollars.
After installation, we walk the property with you. You see the work up close, we address any questions, and you get documentation of materials used and warranty information. No surprises, no rushing off to the next job.
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You get multiple material options that make sense for Lexington’s climate. Fiber cement siding handles moisture and temperature swings better than most alternatives. Vinyl siding offers low maintenance and solid performance for budget-conscious projects. We’ll explain the real differences, not just push the most expensive option.
Energy efficiency matters here because Massachusetts electricity costs run about 45% higher than the national average. Insulated siding options help reduce the load on your heating and cooling systems. That’s not marketing talk. That’s physics and your monthly utility bill.
We handle both residential and commercial properties. The approach is similar but the scale and timing requirements are different. We coordinate with property managers and business owners to minimize disruption while maintaining the same installation standards.
You also get free siding estimates in Lexington, MA with actual detail. We don’t give you a number pulled from thin air. You’ll see a breakdown that makes sense, explains material choices, and gives you something useful to compare if you’re getting multiple quotes.
Most residential siding projects take one to two weeks depending on your home’s size and the material you choose. A typical single-family home in Lexington runs about seven to ten days from start to finish.
Weather affects the timeline more than most homeowners expect. We can’t install siding in heavy rain or when temperatures drop too low for proper adhesive curing. In Lexington, that means spring and fall projects sometimes take a few extra days compared to summer work.
If we find underlying damage when we remove old siding, that adds time. Rotted sheathing needs replacement before new siding goes up. We’ll let you know immediately if we discover issues that weren’t visible during the initial inspection, and we’ll give you a revised timeline before proceeding.
Fiber cement typically costs 30-50% more upfront than vinyl siding for materials and installation combined. On a 2,000 square foot home, you might see vinyl come in around $12,000-15,000 while fiber cement runs $18,000-25,000.
But fiber cement delivers better ROI at resale. Recent data shows fiber cement returns about 114% of its cost when you sell, meaning you actually recoup more than you spent. Vinyl returns are closer to 70-75%. For Lexington homes where median prices hit nearly two million dollars, that difference matters.
Maintenance costs also differ. Vinyl never needs painting but can crack or warp in extreme temperature swings. Fiber cement needs repainting every 10-15 years but handles weather and impact damage much better. Over 20 years of ownership, the total cost gap narrows considerably when you factor in maintenance and resale value.
Yes, but the amount depends on what you’re replacing and what you’re installing. If your current siding has no house wrap or insulation behind it, you’re losing conditioned air through your walls every single day.
Adding insulated vinyl siding or fiber cement with proper house wrap and foam backing can reduce heating and cooling costs by 15-25%. For Lexington homeowners spending around $340 monthly on electricity, that’s $50-85 back in your pocket each month. Over a year, you’re looking at $600-1,000 in savings.
The biggest gains come from eliminating air infiltration. Old siding develops gaps that let outside air seep in around windows, corners, and seams. New siding with proper installation seals those gaps. Your HVAC system doesn’t have to work as hard to maintain temperature, and you feel the difference in both comfort and cost.
If damage covers less than 30% of your siding and the rest is in good condition, repair usually makes sense. Isolated storm damage, a few cracked panels, or damage from a specific incident can often be patched without replacing everything.
Full replacement makes more sense when you’re seeing widespread issues. Multiple areas with cracks, warping across different sections, visible water damage or mold behind panels, or siding that’s 20+ years old and showing its age. At that point, you’re not just fixing what’s broken. You’re preventing the next round of problems.
Energy efficiency is another factor. If your home was built in the 1960s or earlier and still has original siding with no insulation or moisture barrier, replacement gives you a chance to upgrade the entire envelope. You’re not just getting new panels. You’re getting modern weather protection and insulation that didn’t exist when your home was built.
Fiber cement performs best in coastal New England climates. It doesn’t absorb moisture like wood, doesn’t crack from temperature swings like vinyl can, and handles salt air exposure without degrading. James Hardie specifically engineers their fiber cement for different climate zones, and their products designed for this region account for humidity, freeze-thaw cycles, and storm exposure.
Vinyl siding works well if you choose thicker gauges designed for cold climates. Cheap vinyl will crack when temperatures drop below zero and warp during summer heat. Quality vinyl with proper thickness handles Lexington weather fine and costs significantly less than fiber cement.
Wood siding looks great but requires more maintenance here than in drier climates. You’re repainting or restaining every 5-7 years, and you need to stay on top of any moisture issues immediately. Cedar holds up better than pine, but both need consistent attention to prevent rot in New England’s humid conditions.
Lexington requires building permits for full siding replacement but typically not for minor repairs. We handle the permit application process and coordinate required inspections so you don’t have to navigate town hall procedures.
The permit process usually takes one to two weeks in Lexington. We submit plans showing the scope of work, materials being used, and any structural changes if applicable. Once approved, we schedule inspections at required stages during installation.
Some homeowners prefer to pull permits themselves to save the administrative fee. That’s fine, but you’ll need detailed specifications from us to complete the application correctly. Either way, the work doesn’t start until permits are in hand. Lexington’s building department takes exterior work seriously, and we’re not cutting corners on compliance.