Gutters are the part of the roof system people think about least, and a perfectly good roof that dumps its water straight down onto the foundation is a job only half done. Next Gen Roofing Pros hangs seamless gutters across the central Valley that are sized to the roof feeding into them, pitched the right way toward the downspouts, and routed so the water ends up well away from the foundation, the slab, and any slope below. In a town that stays bone dry for months and then takes much of a winter's rain in a few concentrated days, and where so many homes sit on a hillside grade, a gutter system that genuinely works counts for far more than the long dry stretch lets on.
- Seamless aluminum gutters with the joints kept to a minimum
- Correct pitch so the water travels to the downspouts
- Fascia repaired wherever it has rotted out
- Downspouts routed clear of the foundation and the grade
- Guards where the tree and debris load genuinely warrants them
- Free measurement and an honest written estimate
What runoff does to a hillside lot in a town of long dry spells
During a storm a roof sheds a startling amount of water, and every gallon is funneled toward the edge. A gutter has one task, to catch that water and carry it well clear of the house, and when it falls short the runoff comes down in a concentrated stream right at the base of the wall. Sherman Oaks makes the problem harder than a steadily wet climate would, because the long dry season lets leaves, grit, and debris pile up inside a system that has not handled real water in months, and then the winter's first heavy storm arrives all at once and overwhelms it. The trouble starts in the worst possible place, against the foundation of the home.
On the hillside lots south of Ventura Boulevard the stakes climb higher. Water dumped at the top of a slope or against a foundation cut into a grade does not simply pool, it carries soil with it, and unmanaged runoff is a genuine factor in the slope and drainage concerns that hillside homes already live with. Overflow rots out the fascia and the soffit, runoff streaks down the stucco, and saturated ground presses against foundations and retaining walls. None of it looks alarming during any single storm, which is exactly why owners let it slide, yet across a few wet winters it adds up to far more than a proper gutter system would have cost in the first place.
What it takes to hang gutters that hold and drain
Sound gutters are a good deal more than a trough tacked along the eave. They have to be sized to the actual roof area draining into them, pitched correctly so the water runs toward the downspouts rather than standing still, and braced well enough that the weight of a hard Valley downpour does not pull them off the house. We install seamless aluminum gutters, which keep the joints that become tomorrow's leaks to a minimum, and we place and route the downspouts so the water is carried truly clear of the foundation and, on a grade, directed away from the slope rather than released right at the top of it.
Anywhere the fascia behind the old gutters has rotted, we put it back to sound condition before the new run goes up, because gutters anchored into soft, spongy wood will not hold their place for long. We fit guards where the tree cover and debris load on a particular home genuinely warrants them, which on the leafier Sherman Oaks streets and the canyon-edge lots is more often than not, rather than pushing them onto every house as a reflex upsell. The goal is a system that moves your roof's runoff away dependably, winter after winter, while asking as little maintenance of you as possible.
Quiet protection for everything below the eave
Of all the projects a house can take on, gutters rank among the better values, precisely because they head off the slow, expensive damage nobody notices until it has already gone too far. Putting gutters right is almost always cheaper than the foundation, stucco, and landscaping repairs they spare you, and on a hillside lot they help keep runoff from undermining the grade. Good gutters are quiet protection for everything sitting beneath and downhill of them.
There is no charge to come out, measure the run, and lay out exactly what your house needs, with a straight figure put in writing. If your present gutters are spilling over, sagging off the fascia, or sending water somewhere it has no business going, the fix is usually a simple one, and it is among the easiest ways there is to protect the rest of the home.
Gutter work also pairs naturally with a re-roof, and lining the two up together often makes sense. With the roof already open and the crew on site, swapping worn gutters at the same time spares you a second mobilization and ensures the gutters are matched to the new roof from the start. Even so, gutters do not have to wait on a roof replacement. On a roof that is otherwise fine, a failing gutter system deserves attention on its own before the next wet season puts the foundation and the slope at risk. Whichever path suits your situation, you get our honest recommendation rather than a bundle of work you do not actually need.
The wider roofing job around this
A roof is a system, so gutter installation rarely stands alone, it connects to full roof replacement, flashing repair, roof inspection, storm damage repair, roofing installation, and our crew handles all of it under one roof. We bring the same service to Gutter Installation in Encino, Gutter Installation in Studio City, Van Nuys gutter installation, Gutter Installation in Valley Village and everywhere else across the Sherman Oaks area.
If you searched for a local roofing crew near you, you have reached a local crew, call 805-725-0072 any time. For background, read Roofing a South-of-the-Boulevard Hillside Home in Sherman Oaks: What the Slope Adds to the Job on our blog, or head back to our Sherman Oaks home page to see everything we do.