Siding Replacement and Repair in Norcross, GA
Old Town Norcross and Subdivision Siding Work, Sorted Out For You
EXOVATIONS is a licensed siding contractor serving Norcross and Gwinnett County, with 28+ years across both the historic Old Town core and the modern subdivision periphery that define this city's housing. We handle the regulatory layer that applies to your specific property and put the answer in writing before the project starts.
Request A Quote Today!
Professional Siding Contractors in Norcross, GA
Norcross is one of the oldest cities in Gwinnett County, incorporated in 1870 with a downtown core that's now a National Register Historic District. The housing pattern that follows is unlike most surrounding Gwinnett cities. Two homes a mile apart in Norcross can carry completely different cladding eras, regulatory layers, and project conversations
We've been working in Gwinnett County since 1998, which means we've handled siding projects on both sides of the Norcross bifurcation. We know the Norcross HPC submission process for Historic District properties, we coordinate HOA architectural-committee review on the periphery subdivisions, and we work with clients across the city's diverse community in the way each project deserves. Every Norcross project starts with an in-home assessment and a written quote matched to your home's era and regulatory layer.
See Our Work
Check out our photo gallery to see the craftsmanship EXOVATIONS brings to every siding job in Norcross and across Gwinnett County. The gallery shows full re-sides on subdivision-periphery homes, color-matched ColorPlus® projects, and heritage-appropriate work on Old Town Victorian and Craftsman properties that passed Norcross HPC review. If you want to see a project on a home that looks like yours before your assessment, ask and we'll point you to the closest match.
Signs Your Norcross Home Needs New Siding
Knowing when to repair or replace your siding helps you avoid expensive surprises and keeps your Norcross home looking right. Six signs to watch for, with the bifurcated-housing-stock context that makes them show up differently on Historic District vs subdivision-periphery homes.
Cracks, Warping, or Holes
On a Norcross subdivision home with original 1990s or early-2000s hardboard, hairline cracks become panel failure quickly because the product is past its intended service life. On an Old Town Victorian or Craftsman home, cracks in painted wood cladding are usually a sign that the historic cladding has reached the end of serviceable life and HPC-approved replacement is worth planning for.
Fading or Peeling Paint
Mold, Mildew, or Algae Growth
North and east elevations of most established Norcross subdivisions sit under canopy shade from the mature 1990s and 2000s landscaping that has fully grown in. Old Town properties often have even denser canopies on smaller lots. Shade plus humidity is the textbook condition for algae and mildew growth, and black streaking that returns within months of a cleaning means moisture is trapped behind the cladding.
Bubbling or Blistering
Almost always trapped moisture. On a Norcross subdivision home built in the 1990s or 2000s, bubbling usually indicates a flashing detail that was wrong from the original build, finally surfacing as visible damage. On an Old Town property, bubbling is often downstream of an under-spec'd historic flashing detail that's reached the end of life.
Increased Energy Bills
If your Norcross subdivision home was built before 2005 and has never been re-sided, there's almost certainly no exterior continuous insulation behind the existing hardboard. Pairing a fiber cement replacement with a continuous insulation layer often delivers a measurable cooling-cost reduction in our climate.
Loose or Missing Panels
On Norcross subdivision homes, this is usually a fastener pull-through after the underlying sheathing has softened, not just storm damage. A single missing panel exposes sheathing to wind-driven rain and accelerates the underlying failure that caused the panel to come loose in the first place.
Neighborhoods We Serve in Norcross
Frequently Asked Questions
Q Is EXOVATIONS a licensed siding contractor in Norcross?
Yes. EXOVATIONS is a licensed Georgia general contractor, fully insured, and a James Hardie Elite Preferred Remodeler, a credential publicly searchable in the manufacturer's contractor directory. We've been serving Norcross and the broader Gwinnett County market since 1998.
Q Do you handle HOA architectural-committee review submissions for Norcross subdivision projects?
Yes, HOA review submission is built into our project scope on every subdivision-periphery Norcross project. We prepare the architectural-committee package, including the EXOvision rendering, the cladding profile and color specs, and any committee-required documentation, and our project manager handles the back-and-forth on conditions. Work is scheduled to start after written committee approval is in hand.
Q Our Norcross home is in the Historic District. Does Norcross have its own Historic Preservation Commission, and how is it different from Roswell or Marietta?
Yes, Norcross runs its own HPC for the Norcross Historic District, and it operates independently from Roswell and Marietta commissions with its own design guidelines and meeting schedule. The Norcross HPC reviews exterior cladding work for consistency with the historic character of the district, which means siding replacement requires submission and approval before work begins. We prepare the HPC submission package as part of our project scope and put written approval in hand before any cladding comes off your home.
Q We are in one of the newer subdivisions south of Old Town Norcross. Do the historic preservation rules affect us, too?
No. The Norcross Historic District has a specific small boundary around Old Town, and properties outside that boundary are not subject to HPC review. Subdivision-periphery projects typically have HOA architectural-committee review instead (which we handle), and the cladding decisions are based on subdivision standards and your home's original build, not heritage guidelines.