Highlands Ranch, CO · Family-owned

Siding in Highlands Ranch, CO.

Tough, fade- and hail-resistant siding for the strong Highlands Ranch sun and the Hail Alley storms. Made for our weather and ready for the HRCA rules. Built by Jon & Janessa Lang.

BBB Accredited Licensed & Insured We handle HRCA approval
4.9 Google rating 196+ projects completed BBB Accredited business Family-owned & operated HRCA & county permits handled
New fade- and hail-resistant siding on a Highlands Ranch home

Built for the Ranch

Highlands Ranch is hard on siding.

We re-side homes all over Highlands Ranch — from the older streets in Northridge and Westridge to the gated lots of BackCountry. Two things up here wear siding out fast: the strong, high-altitude sun that fades and dries it out, and the Hail Alley storms that crack and dent it season after season.

We fix that with tough siding that's built to take a hit and keep its color — fiber-cement like James Hardie instead of brittle old wood or cheap vinyl. And because the HRCA checks your color and material before you start, we handle that form for you, so the whole job goes smooth and passes the first time.

  • Tough fiber-cement siding that resists hail and holds its color in the strong sun.
  • A clean tear-off and proper wrap, so water and wind stay out of the wall.
  • Colors and materials picked to pass the HRCA review the first time.
  • We fill out the HRCA form for you — plus the extra BackCountry form if you're behind the gate.
Get a free Highlands Ranch siding quote
Verified Google review

“They did very good quality work on the house. They were on time and easy to deal with. He was straightforward, and there was nothing hidden about the pricing.”

Joredan Quigley · Work on the house
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Built for Highlands Ranch

The details that make Highlands Ranch siding last.

Most siding fails here for the same reasons: the sun, the hail, the wind, or a skipped approval. We build for all of it.

Strong sun that fades

The high-altitude sun is hard on siding — it fades the color and dries out cheap materials fast. We use fiber-cement that's made to hold its color for years, so your home doesn't look washed out a few summers in.

Right in Hail Alley

Highlands Ranch gets some of the worst hail anywhere on the Front Range. We install impact-tough siding that takes a hit and keeps its color, instead of the brittle old siding that cracks and dents every storm season.

Wind off the foothills

The wind really moves out here. We nail and wrap the siding the right way so it stays tight to the wall and water and wind don't work their way behind it.

HRCA approval & permits

The HRCA Architectural Review Committee (303-471-8821) checks your siding's color and material before you start. We fill out the ARC form for you — plus the extra BackCountry form if you're behind the gate — and pull your Douglas County permit (303-660-7497).

Verified Google review

“I am extremely impressed with the workmanship. High quality product and materials. Exceptional communication.”

Cassie Kidd
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What we see in Highlands Ranch homes

The siding calls all start to rhyme.

After a few hundred Front Range projects, the requests from this town are predictable in the best way. Odds are yours is on this list — and we've already solved it.

Hail-beaten siding

The most common call: siding that's cracked, dented, or chipped after years of Hail Alley storms. We tear it off and replace it with impact-tough siding that takes the next hit and keeps looking new.

Faded, sun-baked walls

The strong sun washes out color fast up here. We re-side with fade-resistant fiber-cement in a fresh color, so the house looks sharp for years instead of going dull a couple summers in.

Aging '80s and '90s homes

A lot of homes in Northridge and Westridge are on their original wood or hardboard siding, and it's splitting and soaking up water. We swap it for low-maintenance siding that doesn't need painting every few years.

Ripping out old vinyl

Cheap vinyl gets brittle, cracks in the cold, and pops loose in the wind. We replace it with fiber-cement that looks better, lasts longer, and stands up to the hail and sun.

Behind the BackCountry gate

BackCountry has its own design review on top of the HRCA — a separate form, looked at every two weeks. We've done it before and handle both, so your siding job doesn't stall in paperwork.

Matching siding to a new build

Folks adding a deck, cover, or outdoor room often want the trim and accents to match the house. We pick siding colors and materials that pass the HRCA and tie the whole project together.

Verified Google reviews

4.9 stars across 196+ projects.

Real, verified reviews from real Colorado homes. The same names come up again and again: Jon, Janessa, and a crew that takes pride in the details.

Verified Google review

“These guys are definitely top-notch. They did very good quality work on the house. They were on time and easy to deal with. I strongly recommend this company. He was straightforward, and there was nothing hidden about the pricing.”

JQ
Joredan Quigley
Work on the house
Verified Google review

“I am extremely impressed with the workmanship. High quality product and materials. Exceptional communication.”

CK
Cassie Kidd
Home exterior
Verified Google review

“You're not going to find a better contractor. They use the best products, top-line carpenters, quality can't be beat!”

AC
Andrew Courtney
Home exterior

Where we work in Highlands Ranch

Siding in every village and neighborhood.

From Northridge to the gated streets of BackCountry. A few of the neighborhoods we work in:

Highlands Ranch siding questions

What homeowners ask us.

What siding holds up best up here?
We mostly use tough fiber-cement siding (like James Hardie) that resists hail and won't fade fast in the strong sun. It stands up to the Hail Alley storms and the high-altitude sun far better than old wood or cheap vinyl. We help you pick a color and material the HRCA will approve.
Do I need HRCA approval to change my siding?
Almost always, yes — especially if the color or material changes. The HRCA Architectural Review Committee checks your siding's color and material before you start (you can reach them at 303-471-8821). We fill out the ARC form for you. If you live behind the BackCountry gate, there's a second review there too — and we handle that one as well.
Can new siding really stand up to the hail?
Yes. Highlands Ranch sits right in Hail Alley, so we install impact-tough siding that takes a hit and keeps its color. It holds up far better than the brittle old siding that cracks and dents every storm season.
Who issues the building permit?
Highlands Ranch is part of unincorporated Douglas County, so the permit comes from the county (303-660-7497), not a city. A full re-side usually needs a permit, and we pull it for you along with the HRCA approval.
Will new siding cut down on painting?
Yes. Fiber-cement comes with the color baked in and holds it for years, so you're not repainting the house every few summers like you would with old wood. Less upkeep is a big reason folks here switch.
How long does a Highlands Ranch re-side take?
Most homes take one to two weeks, once the HRCA says yes and materials are in. You get a real schedule up front and a crew that shows up when we said — that's behind a lot of our reviews.

Ready for siding that takes the hail?

Get a free, itemized Highlands Ranch siding estimate from the owners. Most homeowners hear back the same day.

Get My Free Estimate or call (720) 712-4058
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