Metal roofing Hendersonville commercial owners can call locally — we are headquartered in Flat Rock, inside Henderson County, not a metro operation traveling in. 24-gauge and 22-gauge standing seam in Hendersonville with Kynar 500 PVDF finish for I-26 corridor manufacturing, ag processing, medical office, Main Street architectural, and distribution buildings across Hendersonville, Fletcher, Mills River, and East Flat Rock. Commercial metal roof repair too. 48-hour bids, NCLBGC licensed.
A licensed PM has your request. We'll reach out within 24 business hours — typically sooner. If your roof is actively leaking, call (866) 487-8572 for same-day response.
We are the commercial metal roofing contractor in Hendersonville that building owners call for standing seam in Hendersonville, metal roof replacement, and commercial metal roof repair across Henderson County. Our headquarters sits in Flat Rock — inside the county, minutes from downtown Hendersonville — so this is not a satellite market for us; it is the home market, with direct relationships at the City of Hendersonville and Henderson County permit counters. The Henderson County commercial inventory is dominated by the I-26 manufacturing corridor running Fletcher to Mills River, where heavy industrial envelopes, ag-processing buildings, and a growing medical-office stock make standing seam metal a frequent spec. When the roof is sloped, architectural, planning rooftop solar, or sitting on an exposed plateau, metal usually wins; when it's a low-slope warehouse or manufacturing deck where appearance doesn't matter, a Hendersonville TPO flat roof is often the better dollar. The full panel, gauge, seam, and finish library — 24-ga vs 22-ga, snap-lock vs mechanical seam, Kynar 500 colors, wind ratings — lives on our standing seam metal pillar page; this page covers how that spec plays out specifically in the Hendersonville market.
Gauge is the first decision, and for Henderson County commercial work we default to 24-gauge Galvalume. It meets NC commercial wind-uplift requirements for the inland Blue Ridge and resists oil-canning across the long panel runs that industrial and ag-processing buildings demand — the thinner 26-gauge spec is residential and light-agricultural, and we only match it when repairing an existing older metal roof in place. We step to 22-gauge mechanical 2-inch seam on exposed-plateau sites, taller envelopes along the Fletcher–Mills River industrial ring, and buildings where heavy rooftop process equipment or the post-Helene wind review pushes the uplift number higher. The Kynar 500 PVDF finish carries a 30-year paint warranty with chalk-and-fade resistance rated to AAMA 2605, in the architectural color range that downtown Hendersonville Main Street and medical-campus work tends to require.
Hurricane Helene (FEMA disaster DR-4827, September 2024) reset the wind expectations for Henderson County commercial roofs. Metal generally outperformed single-ply in the wind field, but we still saw ridge-cap, exposed-fastener, and flashing failures on older metal systems — which is why our post-Helene defaults favor enhanced perimeter-and-ridge attachment, mechanical seam over snap-lock on exposed sites, and 22-gauge where the uplift review supports it. A meaningful share of current Henderson County metal work runs through insurance-claim documentation; we deliver the full package — core sampling where applicable, drone imagery with damage annotation, seam-and-panel condition mapping, and scope-of-work breakdown in carrier-preferred format. The underlying wind and storm record behind those spec changes is collected in the NC commercial storm-event dataset, and county-level building and storm context lives on our Henderson County page.
On solar: Henderson County manufacturers and warehouses weighing rooftop arrays under the federal ITC should know standing seam is the best commercial substrate for it. S-5!, AceClamp, and PMC clips grip the seam ribs with non-penetrating mechanical pressure — no screws through the weather plane, no flashing risk, no warranty voidance — at a 1,000-pound uplift rating per clip. We spec a solar-ready seam profile on metal jobs for buildings considering future arrays so they're array-compatible without a retrofit. Where a building already owns a leaking metal roof, the better first call is usually commercial metal roof repair — most seam and flashing failures don't justify a tear-off with 20-plus years of panel life remaining.
Installed cost runs $14–28 per square foot for 24-gauge Kynar 500 standing seam across Henderson County, depending on building type, seam spec, and mountain access. Ag-processing trends lower; medical-office and Main Street architectural trends higher. 22-gauge mechanical-seam upgrade adds $2.00–3.50/sqft.
Metal install is substantially different from single-ply — fabrication lead time, concealed-clip layout, and weather-window management all drive the schedule. The Henderson County process below adapts to three site types: I-26 corridor manufacturing and distribution, ag-processing and agricultural buildings across the rural county, and Main Street / medical-campus architectural work. Lead time from contract to completion on a 40,000 sqft commercial metal roof runs 4–6 weeks including panel fabrication.
Licensed roofing professional on-site within 48 hours of RFQ. Drone survey and structural review of the deck and framing — standing seam needs framing every 4–6 ft or a proper structural substrate. We confirm wind zone (24-ga inland Henderson County standard, 22-ga on exposed-plateau or heavy-process buildings), inventory rooftop mechanical, and generate the panel-layout drawing for fabrication. For Helene-damaged metal, full insurance-claim documentation is captured here.
Detailed line-item bid delivered within 48 hours of assessment. Gauge, seam type (snap-lock vs mechanical 2-inch), Kynar 500 color, and substrate sized for the building's wind exposure and NC energy code. Where a low-slope deck makes a single-ply membrane the better dollar, we say so and quote the TPO alternative honestly. Historic-district review timeline built in for downtown Hendersonville Main Street work.
City of Hendersonville permit for in-city work; Henderson County inspections for Fletcher, Mills River, Laurel Park, Flat Rock, and the unincorporated I-26 corridor. NCLBGC license filed on every application. Downtown Hendersonville historic-district review coordinated where the metal profile or finish is visible from the street.
Existing roof removed in phases to maintain weather coverage on the occupied envelope. Deck inspected, degraded sheathing replaced, structural fasteners verified. Synthetic underlayment installed to full deck — ice-and-water membrane at valleys, eaves, and penetrations. Cleats and concealed clips laid out on the fabrication grid.
24-ga or 22-ga Galvalume panels roll-formed to exact lengths — long single-piece runs on-site to avoid field splices. Concealed stainless clips set on 18–24 inch centers per the uplift calc. Snap-lock or mechanical 2-inch seam closed per spec; on exposed Henderson County sites the mechanical double-lock is what separates a 50-year roof from a 25-year one. Penetration flashings field-formed in matching metal.
Ridge caps, gable and rake trim, valley flashings, snow retention where spec'd, and all penetration flashings installed to manufacturer detail. Kynar 500 paint warranty registered (30 years) and substrate warranty registered (up to 35 years). For insurance-claim work, final scope documentation and carrier closeout delivered. As-built drawings, color cards, and OSHA compliance records handed off.
The I-26 manufacturing corridor between Fletcher and Mills River is the densest industrial roof spine in WNC, and it carries a mix of low-slope membrane decks and sloped or architectural metal envelopes. Cummins-Meritor at Fletcher — the former Meritor commercial-axle plant, acquired by Cummins in 2022, now the company's largest North American manufacturing site producing roughly 70% of US Class 8 truck axles, with a $17M automation expansion announced in 2022 — anchors the heavy-industrial end, with decades of bolt-on rooftop mechanical that leave a flashing-and-penetration map no off-the-shelf bid captures without a walk-through. GF Linamar's 57-acre LEED-certified light-metal die-casting plant at 490 Ferncliff Park Drive in Mills River puts roof-deck thermal loads from the magnesium and aluminum die-cast process onto the spec sheet. Elkamet in East Flat Rock — the German polymer-extrusion manufacturer making automotive profiles and PA/PE fuel-and-hydraulic tanks, which has expanded four times since arriving in 2006 — and BorgWarner's new $74.9M, 220,000 sqft advanced-manufacturing build at the Blue Ridge Commerce Center off McMurray Road round out the corridor. Standing seam fits these buildings on sloped roof sections, screen walls, and architectural entries; the large low-slope production decks more often take a Hendersonville TPO membrane. For the general industrial discipline, see our manufacturing roofing page.
Ag-processing and medical-polymer buildings are a Henderson County signature, and metal suits both. Raumedic's Mills River production facility and US headquarters — the German medical-polymer manufacturer making catheters, drug-delivery systems, and molded surgical components, a $26.3M build creating 138 jobs — and Selee Corporation at 700 Shepherd Street in Hendersonville (ceramic-foam filters for the metals industry) sit on the precision-manufacturing end where roof-deck cleanliness and process-equipment penetration detail matter. Kimberly-Clark's Berkeley Mills in East Flat Rock, a nonwovens plant operating in the county since the 1920s, anchors the legacy-industrial inventory. Agricultural and food-processing buildings across the rural county — apple-packing houses, produce cold rooms, and equipment barns through Edneyville, Dana, and Etowah — are the classic standing-seam use case: long single-piece panel runs, mill-finish Galvalume or low-cost Kynar, and the metal snow-shedding geometry that suits the higher-elevation rural sites. Cold-storage and refrigerated portions carry vapor-retarder discipline that doesn't apply to dry-goods space; for that detail see our food-processing roofing approach.
The medical-campus and architectural commercial stock is where metal's appearance and 30-year paint warranty earn the premium. Pardee UNC Health — the county-owned Hendersonville hospital founded in 1953, licensed for 222 acute-care beds, with satellite BlueMD facilities through Mills River and Arden — and AdventHealth Hendersonville, the century-old faith-based system, anchor a healthcare roof inventory that runs long capital-planning cycles (18–36 months, not 60-day RFQs) and demands occupied-building infection-control and HVAC-intake coordination during tear-off. Blue Ridge Community College's Health Sciences Center and Flat Rock campus add institutional roof inventory. Downtown Hendersonville's Main Street historic district — one of the most intact early-20th-century commercial main streets in WNC — holds the architectural-metal book, where visible standing seam triggers local historic review for profile and finish. For the GMP-adjacent portions of medical and pharma-grade buildings, our pharma/biotech facility discipline applies. None of the above is a customer-list claim — it is the named-facility map of the Henderson County market we operate inside, with the metal spec, cost band, and permit cadence that goes with each sub-market.
Standing seam on I-26 corridor manufacturing, ag-processing and agricultural buildings, medical-campus architectural work, downtown Hendersonville Main Street commercial, and commercial metal roof repair across Fletcher, Mills River, East Flat Rock, and Etowah. Kynar 500 paint warranty registered on every install.
The Henderson County climate drives four spec considerations that favor standing seam metal on the right building. Freeze-thaw cycling (30–50 cycles a year on the higher-elevation rural sites) punishes ballasted and mechanically-attached membrane seams in a way that doesn't affect a continuous metal panel. Snow load in the Blue Ridge runs heavier than most of NC, and metal's smooth, sloped geometry sheds snow where membranes accumulate ice dams at drains. UV exposure at elevation is significant on the South Slope of the Blue Ridge — the Kynar 500 PVDF finish is specifically rated for chalk-and-fade resistance under that load. And post-Helene wind design now shapes every new metal spec we write in the county.
For exposed-plateau and ridge-top buildings — common across the rural Henderson County agricultural inventory and the higher-elevation commercial sites toward Bat Cave and Edneyville — our default is 22-gauge mechanical 2-inch seam with enhanced perimeter and ridge attachment. That spec carries wind ratings beyond what snap-lock or single-ply reaches, and the mechanical double-lock seam is the difference between a 50-year roof and a 25-year one. For lower-exposure in-town commercial, 24-gauge snap-lock is correct and keeps the budget reasonable. We size every attachment pattern to the building's specific exposure rather than defaulting to a one-size spec.
For owners weighing metal against a membrane on a Henderson County building, the honest frame is the capital horizon. If you plan to hold the building past one financial cycle, standing seam's net present value usually beats every alternative — 50-plus years of service against the 20–30 a single-ply delivers, plus solar-readiness and near-zero maintenance through the window. If the building is a low-slope warehouse or manufacturing deck where appearance is irrelevant and the budget drives the spec, the Hendersonville TPO flat roof is often the better dollar, and we'll quote it honestly. The full system-by-system comparison lives on the standing seam metal pillar.
Standing seam for I-26 corridor manufacturing, ag processing, medical campus, Main Street architectural, or commercial metal roof repair. Local Henderson County contractor headquartered in Flat Rock. 48-hour detailed bid.