Call us on 01603 905 295 or email info@norwich-roofing.co.uk
EXCELLENT Based on 98 reviews Posted on Google David ChisholmTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Very pleased with the work. Scaffolding up on schedule and came down same day that the job finished. Workers really put their back into the job, personable and helpful. Work quality excellent.Posted on Google DavidTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. We have recently had our whole roof done (recycling tiles, where possible) and were are very pleased with the work. We know absolutely nothing about roofing, so we were a bit nervous about finding the right team, but we were highly impressed with the company. They explained everything clearly, made us feel completely comfortable and we found the whole process much less difficult that we had anticipated. The office was very efficient and replied quickly, often within the hour. The team of roofers led by Kirk were great. They worked really hard (during some very punishing weather) and kept us fully informed on all aspects of what they were doing - Kirk would often show us photos on his phone to explain things to us and impressed us with his knowledge and enthusiasm. They tidied up after every day and took a real pride in their work. Everything was finished on time and to a high standard. We want to make a special note of the lead work that they did which is fantastic!Posted on Google David PalingTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Great job on our roof as large piece of tile/cement/brick had come away. Fixed in an hour. Good rates. No nonsense. Def recommend.Posted on Google paulanthonybuddTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. I asked these people for a quote because I was recommended by a friend of mine; I accepted the quote; The job was completed to an excellent standard( The job was completed on time; I will DEFINITELY be recommending Point Roofing to all of my family and friends and business contacts!!Posted on Google Luis SofiaTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. My gutters were causing a monsoon on my porch 🌧️! Adam and his team, especially Joshua, were absolute lifesavers. Joshua even came after hours to diagnose the problem and offered an instant fix. Talk about service that goes above and beyond! ⭐💯🛠️👍Posted on Google Liz PlaterTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. From my first contact with Point Roofing the service has been excellent. All the admin and arrangements have been swiftly and efficiently dealt with. The three guys who undertook the work are ultimate craftsmen. The quality of the work to retile both the house and shed has been exceptional. They were very easy to work with and, in completing the work, I can see that they have paid attention to every detail. Can’t thank them enough LizPosted on Google Douglas BirdTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Replacement of broken roof tiles, re-cementing of the ridge and cleaning up completed very quickly, efficiently and in a very friendly manner. Looks very good!Posted on Google julie getleyTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. We had a leaky conservatory roof and Point Roofing replaced it with a tiled roof. I can’t thank the team enough for their professionalism, work ethic, and timely service from start to finish. We are really impressed with how this has transformed our room and we will be able to use it all year round.Posted on Google Jon GetleyTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Point Roofing have recently cleaned some of our roofing and I must compliment them on their professionalism. From initial quote to timescales and the workforce leaving the site spotless on completion of work it was most impressive .Posted on Google Siobhan MuskettTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. We found Point Roofing very efficient. Adam was a good communicator, they came when they said they would, fixed the problem, were pleasant to do business with. We had waited a year for another roofer to fix the problem so we were delighted that Point Roofing were so helpful.
Costessey is one of those places where two very different types of housing sit side by side. Old Costessey, down by the Wensum and the Tud, has cottages and older properties that have been standing for well over a century, while New Costessey and the newer developments around Longwater and Queen’s Hills are anything from brand new to sixty years old. From a roofer’s point of view, that means everything from ageing pantiles on period cottages to modern interlocking tiles on estates that are only now hitting their first round of repairs.
Being based in Norwich, our roofing team are in Costessey constantly. It’s a short run out along the Dereham Road, and the sheer number of homes across the parish keeps us busy year-round. Slipped tiles after a rough night, flat-roofed extensions that have started letting water in, gutters overflowing where they’ve come loose, we’ve dealt with all of it on streets you’d recognise.
If something on your roof doesn’t look right, or you’ve got a stain on a ceiling and no idea where it’s coming from, get in touch. We’ll come out, find the actual cause, and tell you plainly what fixing it involves and what it costs. No drama, no upselling, just a roof sorted properly.
Costessey throws a real variety of tiled roofs at us. The older properties in Old Costessey often carry clay pantiles, some of them decades beyond what anyone expected them to last, while the post-war and newer estates across New Costessey are mostly concrete tile. Different materials, but the weak points are surprisingly similar: it’s rarely the tiles themselves that give up first. It’s the mortar bedding on ridges and verges, the underfelt that’s turned to paper with age, or fixings that have quietly rusted away until one gusty night rearranges things.
And that’s the sneaky part. A tile roof can be letting water in for a long time before the house tells you about it. The felt catches the drips, the timber absorbs the rest, and the first sign you get is a brown ring on a bedroom ceiling months down the line. By then, what started as a twenty-minute fix has grown roots.
So here’s how we work. We inspect the roof properly, from on it, not from the pavement with a pair of binoculars. Then we give you the honest version of what we’ve found. If a handful of tiles and some repointing will sort it, that’s the quote you’ll get, with replacements matched to your existing roof, whether that’s pantile or concrete. If the roof is truly done, we’ll show you the evidence and price a re-roof fairly. Nobody gets talked into work their house doesn’t need.
Drive through New Costessey and count the garages, and you’ll get a sense of how much flat roofing there is in this parish. Add in the kitchen extensions, utility rooms and porches that have been bolted onto homes over the years, and it’s a huge amount of roof, most of it originally covered in mineral felt because at the time nothing else got a look-in. The problem is that felt has a shelf life. Between the summer sun baking it and winter frost working into every tiny crack, it gradually loses its flexibility, and a felt roof that can’t flex is a felt roof that splits.
When yours reaches that point, replacing like with like is a false economy. Modern materials are simply better. For garages and larger extensions we usually fit EPDM rubber, a single membrane laid in one piece with no seams for water to exploit, and a lifespan measured in decades rather than years. For smaller areas, or flat roofs you might occasionally need to stand on, GRP fibreglass sets into one solid, seamless skin that shrugs off weather and wear alike.
That said, we’re not in the business of ripping off roofs that don’t need it. Plenty of the flat roof leaks we attend in Costessey come down to a single split, a lifted edge or a poorly sealed upstand, and a targeted repair keeps the rain out for years. We’ll look first, then tell you which side of the line your roof sits on, so you’re only ever paying for the work it actually needs.
Rooflines fail slowly, then all at once. Up at gutter height, out of sight and out of mind, moss builds up, joints start weeping, and timber boards drink in every rainy Norfolk week behind a coat of paint that stopped protecting anything years ago. Then one winter a gutter comes away from the wall, or you notice the fascia above the garage has gone spongy, and suddenly the roofline is all you can look at.
Costessey has plenty of homes at exactly this stage. Anything built from the 50s through to the 80s almost certainly went up with timber fascias and soffits, and unless someone has already replaced them, they’re now living on borrowed time. The pattern is always the same: the timber softens, the screws holding the gutter brackets lose their bite, the gutter tips out of level, and rainwater starts finding its own route down your walls instead of down the pipe. Damp patches, ruined pointing and rotten window frames tend to follow.
The fix is straightforward. We strip the old boards and fit uPVC fascias and soffits with new guttering, a roofline that needs no paint, no maintenance and no more thought for decades. And if yours isn’t at that stage yet, if it’s just a sagging bracket or a leaking joint, we’ll do the small repair and charge small-repair money. You’ll know exactly what we’ve found and exactly what it costs before we start.
Costessey lies just west of Norwich, and it’s really two places wearing one name. Old Costessey grew up centuries ago where the River Tud meets the Wensum, and you can still feel the village in its lanes, its church of St Edmund, and the older cottages scattered along The Street. New Costessey is a different story altogether, built out through the twentieth century along the Dereham Road until it merged into the edge of the city, and more recently joined by the huge Queen’s Hills development on the parish’s northern side. Between them, Costessey has become one of the largest parishes in Norfolk.
For us, that history reads like a work diary. Period cottages, inter-war and post-war semis, 60s and 70s estates, and modern new-builds all sit within the same few square miles, and every one of those eras brings its own roofing quirks. It’s why we’re out this way so often, whether that’s a repair off Longwater Lane or a full re-roof up on Queen’s Hills.
And we don’t stop at the parish boundary. Taverham, Drayton, Easton, Bawburgh, Ringland, Hellesdon and the western edge of Norwich itself are all part of our regular rounds. If you’re anywhere out this side of the city and wondering whether we’ll travel to you, the short answer is yes, just give us a ring.
Usually within a few days for a quote visit. If you’ve got an active leak or storm damage we’ll do our best to prioritise it — just call and let us know what’s happening.
We’ll do whatever is actually needed. Plenty of jobs we go out to are repairs, and that’s what we quote for. If the roof genuinely needs replacing we’ll tell you why and show you what we mean. But we’re not in the business of upselling people who just need a tile fixing.
EPDM is a rubber membrane — very flexible, great for larger flat roofs, and handles thermal movement well. GRP is fibreglass — gives a rigid, seamless surface and is extremely durable. We fit both and will tell you which suits your roof rather than just going with the cheaper option to install.
Yes — 10 years on roof replacement and roofline work. That’s our promise that the job has been done properly.
Always, for repair and replacement work. No charge for coming out to Taverham.
Yes. We work on older Norfolk properties regularly. If your roof needs handling with a bit more care than a standard modern tile job, that’s not a problem for us.
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