From small retail to multi-tenant industrial, Red Hawk Roofing services commercial properties across the Front Range. We work with property managers, owners, and insurance teams.
Commercial Roofing in Littleton, Colorado often involves installing or restoring TPO and EPDM membrane systems on flat and low-slope commercial buildings — the dominant assembly for Colorado warehouses, retail, and HOA-common buildings. Red Hawk Roofing has documented 5 hail events in Littleton since 2021 — the largest being 2.00-inch hail on June 22, 2023 — which causes the punctures, tears, and fastener pull-through on aging single-ply membranes we repair or replace under commercial scopes.
Our nearest crew to Littleton works out of our Highlands Ranch service area. We dispatch Highlands Ranch field teams from there for Littleton projects — same crew, same warranty.
Littleton's housing mix runs from 1960s ranches in the older grid through 2000s subdivisions to the south, so age-of-roof varies considerably by neighborhood. We work directly with every major Colorado carrier — including State Farm, USAA, Allstate, Farmers, American Family, and Liberty Mutual — and handle the adjuster process end to end on Littleton claims. City of Littleton permits residential roofing; we file the application and schedule inspections as part of every replacement.
For commercial roofing in Littleton, expect: free roof inspection, adjuster-grade photo documentation, written scope of work, insurance liaison if applicable, and 60-mil TPO or EPDM membrane, mechanically attached or fully adhered per substrate, factory-trained welds, full curb and penetration flashing, and 15–20 year material warranty. Most commercial roofing projects in Littleton complete within 1–3 weeks depending on building size, deck prep, and tenant access.
Red Hawk installs TPO (thermoplastic polyolefin), EPDM rubber, PVC, modified bitumen, built-up roofing (BUR), and standing-seam metal across the Front Range. TPO is the most common new-install in Colorado for its energy efficiency and cool-roof properties; EPDM is durable for low-slope industrial buildings; metal is preferred for distribution and retail. We also handle re-cover systems where a new membrane is installed over existing roofing without tear-off, reducing project timeline and cost by 20–30%.
Commercial roofs are typically low-slope (under 2:12 pitch) with single-ply membrane systems, while residential roofs are steep-slope with shingles or panels. Commercial install requires different specialized equipment (heat welders, hot mops, rolling racks), specific safety planning around HVAC and rooftop equipment, and longer warranty options up to 30 years. Project timelines are longer (1–6 weeks vs 1–3 days), permit and engineering requirements stricter, and ongoing maintenance contracts are standard. Red Hawk's commercial division is staffed separately from residential crews.
Manufacturer membrane warranties on commercial systems typically run 15, 20, or 30 years depending on system selection. NDL (No Dollar Limit) warranties are the gold standard — manufacturer covers all repair costs for the warranty period with no cap. System warranties (membrane + insulation + accessories combined) cost more but cover the entire assembly. Red Hawk's workmanship warranty is 5 years on commercial installs. We help you register your project with the manufacturer (Carlisle, GAF, Firestone, Johns Manville) to activate full coverage.
The City of Littleton issues building permits within city limits regardless of county, through Community Development at 2255 W Berry Ave. Outside city limits, the property's actual county (Arapahoe, Jefferson, or Douglas) handles permitting. Red Hawk identifies the right authority on every estimate. Littleton permit fees run $90–$240 with 5–10 business day review.
Littleton asphalt roof replacements typically run $15,000 to $25,000. Custom homes in Bow Mar, Columbine Valley, and Roxborough Park run $17,000–$32,000 with steep pitches and complex valleys. Red Hawk provides free written estimates with line-item pricing.
Yes — Littleton sits on the south-metro supercell track. The ground record shows 5 documented hail days within 10 miles of the city between 2021 and 2026, all confirmed by NWS storm spotters, the largest a 2.0-inch measurement on June 22, 2023 (18 ground reports). Foothills-side Roxborough Park tends to get less hail but more wind exposure. Roofs older than 10 years almost always carry cumulative impact damage.
Hail History in Littleton
Littleton has 5 documented hail days within 10 miles of city center between 2021 and 2026 — 5 confirmed by NWS storm-spotter reports on the ground, the largest 2.0-inch hail measured on June 22, 2023 (18 reports), where NOAA radar indicated 3.0 inches — 1.0 inch above the measured size. Radar figures are NOAA SWDI estimates (MEHS), not measurements; ground figures are NWS Local Storm Reports.
Jun 1
2026
1.75"
Measured
9 reports
radar 1.25" (-0.50")
LSR+SWDI
May 30
2024
1.75"
Measured
15 reports
radar 2.50" (+0.75")
LSR+SWDI
Jul 8
2023
1.75"
Measured
15 reports
radar 2.25" (+0.50")
LSR+SWDI
Jun 22
2023
2.00"
Measured
18 reports
radar 3.00" (+1.00")
LSR+SWDI
May 10
2023
1.75"
Measured
1 report
radar 2.50" (+0.75")
LSR+SWDI
Measured figures are NWS Local Storm Reports — human-observed, ground-confirmed hail. Radar-indicated figures are NOAA SWDI estimates (MEHS, a radar algorithm calibrated to a high-end bound) — not measurements, and they can run high versus paired ground reports. Events within ~10 miles of Littleton center, 2021–present, ≥1.0 inch.