St. Louis sits in a humid subtropical climate zone with hot summers and cold winters. This combination creates thermal cycling that stresses shingles. When temperatures swing from below freezing to above 60 degrees in a single week, shingles expand and contract. This movement weakens the adhesive bond between layers. If you install new shingles over old ones that have already been through years of thermal cycling, the base layer is brittle and prone to cracking. Adding weight on top accelerates failure. The humidity also promotes algae and moss growth, which traps moisture against the shingle surface and leads to rot in the underlying decking.
Pioneer Roofing St. Louis understands these local conditions because we have worked on roofs across the metro area for years. We know which neighborhoods have older homes with inadequate attic ventilation and which subdivisions used lower-grade shingles in the 1990s that do not hold up to overlays. We stay current with City of St. Louis building code updates and work with local inspectors regularly. This familiarity means we catch code violations before they become permit issues and recommend solutions that fit your home's unique construction. Choosing a contractor who knows St. Louis roofing conditions protects you from mistakes that out-of-town crews make.