In the Fraser Valley, the roof is the part of the house that never gets a day off. Top Notch Roofing builds the kind that's ready for that.
Rain comes off the mountains and sits over the Valley for weeks. Then summer arrives and the same roof bakes. Wind funnels down between Chilliwack and the river. A roof out here isn't a detail — it's the thing standing between a family and the weather, every single day of the year.
Top Notch Roofing works on that line. Not the showy parts you notice from the curb, but the ones that decide whether a roof lasts a decade or three — the flashing tucked into a valley, the ventilation that keeps the deck dry, the eavestrough that carries a November downpour away from the foundation before it can do any harm.
"A roof either holds the line or it doesn't. There's no halfway about it."
It starts before a single shingle goes down. The old roof comes off, the deck gets a real inspection, and anything soft or rotten is dealt with then — not papered over. Underlayment, drip edge, flashing, shingles: each layer laid so the next one can do its job. By the time the last course is nailed, the roof is a system, not a stack of materials.

Then the Valley does its work. The first big rain of the season, the freeze that comes after, the heat dome in August. A roof built properly meets all of it the same way — quietly. The homeowner never thinks about it, which is exactly the point. The best roofs are the ones you forget are there.
That's the promise: a house that stays dry, warm and sound under one roof, through everything a Fraser Valley year can throw at it.






