Full UPVC roofline replacement and gutter installation across Winsford and Cheshire West. Strip-back of original timber, eaves protection trays, vented soffits, deep-flow guttering in white, black, anthracite grey, brown, woodgrain and Rosewood finishes. Typical 1 to 2 day completion on a 3-bed semi, fully insured, 10-year UPVC system guarantee.
Your trusted, local experts delivering quality workmanship and lasting protection for your home across Winsford and the wider Cheshire West region.
Strip and dispose of all existing timber fascias, soffits and bargeboards (we do not 'cap over' rotten wood, that traps moisture against the rafter tails), inspect every rafter end for rot or splits and replace any unsound timber with treated graded stock, install eaves protection trays to stop water tracking back behind the gutter, fit vented soffits to maintain airflow into the loft, install UPVC fascias and bargeboards in your chosen colour and profile, fit deep-flow UPVC guttering with seamless joins, install or refit downpipes positioned to discharge correctly into existing drainage, full waste removal. Written fixed-price quote, no deposit.
Standard square-edge or ogee fascia profiles in white, black, anthracite grey, brown, Rosewood and Golden Oak woodgrain finishes. Anthracite grey has been the strongest seller across Cheshire over the last few years for both period and modern properties. Soffits available in white, vented (the spec for any property with a habitable loft or roof void), tongue-and-groove for a traditional look. Bargeboards matched to fascia. Guttering profiles in standard half-round (rainwater capacity around 0.7 litres per second), deep-flow (1.5 litres per second, the right call for steeper Cheshire roofs and any property where the existing gutters overflow in heavy rain), or square-line. Sample boards on the survey.
Capping is when a fitter nails new UPVC over the existing rotten timber rather than removing it. It is faster and cheaper at the install but the trapped wood continues to rot, the moisture migrates to your rafter tails, and within five to seven years you have failing structural timber under perfectly good-looking UPVC. We strip back to bare brick and inspect every rafter end. If we find rot, we replace the affected section before the new UPVC goes on. Costs a bit more upfront but it is the only method that actually solves the problem rather than hiding it.
Half-round 112mm gutters cope with most modest UK rainfall but the western Cheshire pattern, especially around Frodsham, Helsby and the Helsby Hill range, regularly exceeds the design capacity. We default to deep-flow 117mm guttering on any property where the existing system overflows or where the catchment is large (steep pitch, large roof area, or a downpipe run that has failed). Joints are seamlessly bonded rather than push-fit on long runs to eliminate the sag-and-leak failure that plagues older systems. Guttering and downpipe installed in matching colour to the fascia. Call 01244 727509 or use the form below.
Fascias & guttering across these key Cheshire and North West locations.
A typical 3-bed semi takes 1 to 2 working days. Larger detached properties run 2 to 3 days. Scaffold goes up at the start, comes down on the last day, full waste removal included.
If the timber is rotten, peeling paint, or showing fungal growth, yes. UPVC is a fit-and-forget solution that does not rot and does not need painting. The bigger issue is that rotten fascia carries the rot back to your rafter tails, and that is structural damage that costs serious money to repair.
Often, yes. If the gutter run is sound but the joint at one bracket has failed, we replace the seal and realign. If the plastic is brittle (typical on systems over 20 years old) or the downpipes are damaged, full replacement is more cost-effective than chasing repairs.
Anthracite grey suits both period and modern, and has been the strongest seller for the last five years. White is still the volume choice for most 1960s-90s estates. Rosewood or Golden Oak woodgrain works on character properties.
Yes, deep-flow 117mm is the default on any high-rainfall catchment or where existing gutters overflow.