




When a home already has solar panels and needs a new roof, most roofing contractors will turn it down or hand it off to someone else. That coordination gap is where things go wrong - panels get damaged, the roof work gets delayed, and the homeowner ends up managing two separate crews who don't talk to each other. We handle both sides of the job ourselves, which is exactly what happened here in Temple.
Here's what we were working with - a worn shingle roof showing clear signs of age and weathering, with solar panels already mounted across a good portion of the surface. Before any roofing work could start, those panels had to come off safely. That means more than just pulling hardware. It means knowing how the system is wired, how the mounts are anchored, and how to get everything back up correctly when the new roof is done.
We stripped the old shingles, completed the full roof replacement, and then reinstalled all the solar panels back onto the new surface. The aerial shots show just how much panel coverage this roof was carrying - two separate arrays spread across different roof sections. Getting all of that back in place the right way, without shortcuts, is not a small task. But that's the job.
The whole point of having one crew handle it is accountability. Nobody's pointing fingers at the other guy if something doesn't line up right. We know the roof because we built it, and we know where every panel mount goes because we pulled it off ourselves. That's a big deal when you're talking about a system that's tied into your home's power.
If you're in Temple and your roof needs work but you've got solar on top of it, don't let that complicate your decision. It just means you need a crew that knows both - and that's exactly what we do.