Document the condition
Note location, timing, weather relationship, changes over time, and any previous work. Photos and simple measurements can improve the first conversation.
Read the local context
Durham combines nineteenth-century tobacco and textile districts, early streetcar neighborhoods, postwar ranches, and fast-growing suburban edges. Piedmont clay, mature tree cover, humid summers, and rolling watersheds make drainage and existing assemblies part of nearly every exterior or structural project.
Ask what will be hidden
Roof area, valleys, tree debris, fascia condition, downspout placement, and final discharge matter more than gutter color. The written scope should explain the preparation and verification that will no longer be visible at completion.
Compare complete scopes
Look for protection, access, materials, permits, testing, cleanup, restoration, exclusions, warranties, and change-order rules.
What official local sources add
Durham maintains official floodplain guidance and separate procedures for historic district, landmark, and sign designations. Parcel-level flood status and local historic designation should be checked before structural, exterior, or drainage work is scoped.
Sources were reviewed June 20, 2026. Confirm parcel-specific flood zones, historic-district status, permits, and current requirements with the relevant authority before authorizing work.