Palm Coast Pro Siding & Wrap brings over 15 years of hands-on experience in siding, house wrapping, and exterior insulation systems. St. Augustine is a city of approximately 16,033 residents in St. Johns County, Florida — the oldest continuously occupied European settlement in the continental United States, founded by Spain in 1565. With a 2024 median household income of $78,151 and a median home value of $492,303, St. Augustine presents a siding market driven by one of the most historically complex housing stocks in Florida. Palm Coast Pro Siding & Wrap serves St. Augustine with licensed, insured siding installation, repair, and house wrap services on residential and commercial properties throughout the city.
St. Augustine's housing spans more than 300 years of construction — Spanish Colonial-era structures along St. George, Aviles, and St. Francis Streets; Victorian and Frame Vernacular homes in Lincolnville and the Abbott Tract; Florida bungalows and ranch-style cottages on Anastasia Island; and 1970s–1990s production residential in St. Augustine South and St. Augustine Shores. The city's humid subtropical climate delivers mean summer highs of 87–88°F, approximately 51 inches of annual rainfall, and sustained coastal humidity from Matanzas Bay. Siding replacement on Historic Downtown and Lincolnville properties falls under City of St. Augustine Historic Preservation Board review governing material selection on contributing structures within the St. Augustine Town Plan National Historic Landmark District.
All siding products installed in St. Augustine carry current Florida Product Approval documentation for St. Johns County's wind-speed design zone. Manufacturer warranties are registered within 30 days of completion, with a 2-year workmanship warranty on all installation labor.
We operate exclusively in the Northeast Florida market. We have completed siding projects across all of Palm Coast's major residential corridors.
Every installer on our crew is trained to Florida Building Code requirements for exterior wall covering and has completed manufacturer certification for at least one major fiber cement or vinyl siding product line.
We have completed thousands of residential and commercial siding projects across Flagler, St. Johns, and Volusia counties.
With approximately 25% of St. Augustine's homes built before 1940 and a median construction year of 1980, repair demand concentrates in four areas: moisture infiltration behind original-era weather barriers, UV degradation on coastal elevations, storm displacement in the Matanzas Bay corridor, and Historic Preservation-compatible material repair.
Pre-1940 structures in the Historic Downtown, along King Street, and in Lincolnville between Riberia and Cerro Streets were built without modern weather-resistive barriers. Original tar paper and board sheathing allow bulk water infiltration through deteriorated lap joints — frequently advanced before interior symptoms appear. We replace moisture control systems using materials compatible with Historic Preservation review requirements.
Wood siding on Victorian and Frame Vernacular homes in the Abbott Tract, North City, and Lincolnville degrades fastest on Matanzas Bay-adjacent elevations where UV exposure and salt air combine. Paint film failure on bay-facing elevations occurs 2–3 years earlier than on shaded walls. We replace degraded panels and apply coastal-rated primer and paint systems compatible with historic preservation standards.
St. Johns County falls within Florida's wind-borne debris region, and Matanzas Bay channels wind-driven rain across downtown and Anastasia Island properties during named storm events. We provide post-storm assessments with written insurance adjuster documentation and emergency panel replacement on sections exposing sheathing.
Properties within the St. Augustine Town Plan National Historic Landmark District — bounded by Cordova, Orange, and St. Francis Streets and Matanzas Bay — require Historic Preservation Board review for exterior siding modifications. Fiber cement profiles replicating wood lap and shingle appearances are the standard compatible specification on non-original-material structures in the district.
St. Augustine's housing is diverse by era: Victorian and Frame Vernacular in Lincolnville and the Abbott Tract along San Marco Avenue; midcentury modern and ranch-style on Anastasia Island across the Bridge of Lions; production residential in St. Augustine South along U.S. 1 South and St. Augustine Shores near Crescent Beach. Fiber cement — James Hardie HardiePlank and HardiePanel — is the dominant re-siding upgrade on Anastasia Island and St. Augustine South properties. Historic Downtown and Lincolnville installations require material selection vetted against Historic Preservation Board standards before work proceeds.
Primary commercial corridors run along U.S. Route 1 South and King Street. Structures on U.S. 1 South require Florida Building Code Chapter 14 compliance and City of St. Augustine permit coordination. Historic commercial structures on King Street and St. George Street fall under Historic Preservation review for exterior modifications.
Davis Shores on Anastasia Island — directly across the Bridge of Lions — contains 1950s–1960s ranch-style homes with original wood lap siding at end of service life. Historic Downtown and Lincolnville properties requiring Board-compatible siding are served with smooth-finish fiber cement lap and cellular PVC profiles meeting Historic Preservation review standards.
Fiber cement — James Hardie HardiePlank and Allura — is the preferred upgrade for Anastasia Island and St. Augustine South. Cellular PVC is specified on Historic Downtown and Lincolnville structures requiring Board-compatible alternatives to new wood. LP SmartSide and natural cedar are specified on Abbott Tract and North City Victorian and craftsman properties where authentic wood texture is the architectural requirement.