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Wake Forest is a college town that outgrew its campus. Wake Forest College was born here in 1834 and stayed until 1956, when it left for Winston-Salem and handed the grounds to Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. What remained is a deep historic core, the streets around the old college and the homes along North Main, ringed now by some of the fastest new growth in the Triangle. Summit and Oak roofs both worlds. A pre-war home under heavy oaks near the seminary and a builder-grade tear-off in Holding Village ask for different work, and we bring the right approach to each address.
Roofing in Wake Forest, NC
Summit and Oak is a Wake Forest roofing contractor handling repair and full replacement across town, from pre-war homes in the Historic District near the old college to first-replacement architectural shingles in Heritage, Traditions, and Holding Village. We pull permits through the Town of Wake Forest Inspections Department at 301 S. Brooks Street and plan for any added Historic District preservation review up front. After storms, the heavy oak and maple canopy over the older core is the real threat, dropping limbs onto valleys and chimney flashing, so we document every inspection clearly. We are not a public adjuster.
Wake Forest splits cleanly by age. The Historic District and North Main carry homes from the 1820s through the 1950s, the old Faculty Avenue stock, with steeper pitches, real wood detailing, and preservation sensitivities. Everything outside that core is recent. Master-planned communities like Heritage, Traditions, and Holding Village added thousands of homes as the town swelled past 50,000, most on straightforward architectural-shingle roofs now reaching their first replacement window. We work the antique end and the builder-grade end with equal care.
Wake Forest sees the same Triangle straight-line wind and summer hail as the rest of Wake County, but its tree cover changes the math. The old neighborhoods around the seminary and North Main sit under a heavy mature oak and maple canopy, and that canopy is the threat. Saturated soil after a storm loosens big limbs, and a falling branch puts more roofs out of service here than hail does. Debris piles in valleys and behind chimneys, traps water, and rots decking from above. A documented inspection after every major blow is what keeps a dropped limb from turning into a deck repair.
We roof homes throughout Wake Forest, including Wake Forest Historic District, North Main Street, Heritage, Traditions, Holding Village, and Wakefield. Whether your home is near E. Carroll Joyner Park or anywhere else in Wake County, a Summit & Oak crew has likely worked your street.
Our Roofing Services in Wake Forest
The full range, available to Wake Forest homeowners.

Cleared a fallen oak limb off a 1920s home near the old college, then rebuilt the rotted valley and decking it had crushed and matched the existing roofline profile through the preservation review.
Full tear-off and re-roof on a builder-grade home in the golf community that had reached the end of its original shingle life, with upgraded underlayment and ridge ventilation to add years to the next roof.
Replaced failed step flashing and rebuilt the chimney cricket on a steep Faculty Avenue roof where wind-driven rain and trapped leaf debris had found their way past the original details.
“A big oak limb came down on our roof near the seminary after a storm. Summit and Oak had it tarped that afternoon, documented all of it so we could file, and the rebuilt valley matched the old roofline.”
“Our Heritage home needed its first new roof and we got several quotes. These guys explained the ventilation upgrade plainly, started when they said, and left the yard cleaner than they found it. No surprises on the bill.”
Wake Forest roof permits are issued by the Town of Wake Forest Inspections Department, in the Town Hall at 301 S. Brooks Street. Homes inside the Wake Forest Historic District can carry added preservation review, and we account for that before we schedule the work.
Permitting authority: Town of Wake Forest Inspections Department
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Yes. We work the older homes around the old college and along North Main regularly. We match the existing roofline profile and account for any added preservation review the district requires before we schedule, so the home keeps its character and the permit clears without surprises.
The Town of Wake Forest Inspections Department, based in the Town Hall at 301 S. Brooks Street, issues residential roof permits and runs inspections inside town limits. We pull the permit and handle the inspection schedule for you. Historic District homes can carry an added review, which we plan for up front.
Call us for an emergency tarp to stop water getting in, then document the damage with photos before anything is moved. We inspect, write up exactly what the limb did, and give you a clear report. If it is commonly covered, you file and stay in control. We are not a public adjuster.

This Heritage homeowner wanted to roof once and chose a standing-seam metal system over a third shingle replacement. We fabricated concealed-fastener panels and custom trim to the roofline, set high-temperature underlayment, and detailed every penetration for a watertight finish rated for 40 to 70 years. Permitted through the Town of Wake Forest Inspections Department on South Brooks Street and installed over solid decking so it stays quiet in heavy rain.
See the full projectFree, documented inspections across Wake Forest and the Triangle. A real estimator within the hour, no pressure.
“Hail took out half the neighborhood. Summit & Oak had photos in my inbox that same afternoon and met my adjuster on the roof a few days later. New roo…”
