College Park Orlando, FL
Service Area
College Park is one of Orlando's oldest and most established inner-city neighborhoods, with a commercial corridor along Edgewater Drive that has served the surrounding residential community for decades. The buildings here are older than most Orlando commercial stock — many predate the post-Disney growth era — and they carry the specific conditions that come with age in Central Florida's climate.
College Park sits between the Downtown core and the Winter Park border in northwest Orlando, roughly bounded by Lake Ivanhoe to the south, the CSX rail line to the west, Princeton Street to the north, and Edgewater Drive to the east. The Edgewater Drive commercial corridor — running from Princeton Street south toward Lake Ivanhoe — is the neighborhood's spine, a street-level retail and dining strip that has maintained continuity through multiple cycles of the broader Orlando market.
The commercial buildings on Edgewater Drive and in the surrounding College Park blocks are predominantly 1-story and 2-story masonry construction from the 1950s through the 1980s. A few 1940s-era storefronts on the north end of Edgewater, several medical and professional office buildings from the 1970s and 1980s on the side streets, and some 1990s infill development round out the stock. Very little of this is recent construction — which means a lot of it is on original or first-recover roof systems that are well past any manufacturer warranty protection.
Older Building Stock — What 40-Year-Old Roofs Look Like in Florida
A commercial building constructed in College Park in 1975 has had its roof system replaced or recovered at least once, possibly twice. The original built-up roof (BUR) installed at construction may have received a recover — a new cap sheet or modified bitumen layer over the existing BUR — in the mid-1990s. That recover, if it is still in place, is now approximately 30 years old and likely well past any warranty protection. The deck beneath all of this — typically a wood plank deck on smaller 1-story buildings, or a concrete deck on the larger professional office buildings from the 1970s — may have conditions that are not visible from the roof surface.
We approach older College Park buildings with deck inspection as a priority item in the scope assessment. Wood plank decks on 1-story commercial buildings from the 1950s and 1960s show rot, splitting, and deflection under moisture loading that has accumulated over decades. Concrete decks show carbonation, spalling at penetration edges, and drain deterioration. Either condition affects the replacement scope — a wood deck with rot needs targeted replacement before membrane installation, and a concrete deck with active spalling at drain edges needs drain replacement coordinated with the roofing work.
Modified bitumen is often the right specification for a College Park older building recovery — not because it is superior to TPO in all conditions, but because the deck conditions, slope characteristics, and penetration layouts on older buildings are often better suited to a fully adhered modified bitumen system than to a mechanically attached single-ply. We evaluate the specific building conditions before recommending a membrane system.
Edgewater Drive Retail — Ground-Floor Commercial Constraints
The ground-floor retail and restaurant tenants on Edgewater Drive operate in buildings where the roof is directly above the occupied space — there is no interstitial floor or plenum between the roof system and the tenant's ceiling. A leak is immediately a business problem: water in the dining room, water on retail inventory, water above computer equipment. Emergency response speed matters more here than on a building with multiple floors buffering the roof from the tenant.
Production scheduling on Edgewater Drive buildings is complicated by street parking and the narrow lot footprints typical of buildings in this era. There is no surface parking lot for material staging — material has to be staged on the building's limited rear access or delivered in smaller quantities to a forward staging area on the street. We plan material logistics before mobilization and coordinate with the City of Orlando if temporary street-use space is required.
Edgewater Drive has enough pedestrian traffic — particularly on weekend afternoons, when the dining and boutique retail traffic peaks — that exterior scaffolding or equipment operations that encroach on the sidewalk require active pedestrian management and likely a City of Orlando sidewalk closure permit. We handle this as part of the project logistics, not as a surprise during production.
Do you do roof assessments on 1950s and 1960s commercial buildings in College Park?
Yes, and older buildings are where thorough inspection matters most. We assess deck condition, drain condition, and the full system history — not just the top layer of membrane visible from the roof walk. Older buildings in Central Florida frequently have conditions below the membrane surface that affect the scope decision.
How do you handle emergency leaks in ground-floor retail buildings with no buffer floor?
Fast. A leak in a single-story building directly above the tenant space needs emergency dry-in before the next rain event. College Park is approximately . We keep emergency dry-in materials on the truck for this type of call.
Can you manage the material staging logistics on a tight Edgewater Drive lot?
Yes. Narrow lot footprints and limited rear access are the norm in College Park. We plan material delivery staging in advance, use smaller delivery loads and more frequent replenishment if the site does not support a full pallet delivery, and coordinate with the City of Orlando for any temporary street-use or sidewalk closure needs.
Do you recommend modified bitumen over TPO for older College Park buildings?
It depends on the specific building. Modified bitumen's fully adhered application suits buildings with deck conditions, slope profiles, and penetration layouts that are less compatible with mechanically attached single-ply. We evaluate the building conditions before recommending a membrane — not before we walk the roof.
College Park commercial building — roof assessment?
Older buildings in this market need thorough assessment before a scope recommendation. Our project managers will walk the roof, evaluate deck and drain conditions, and produce a written report that gives you an honest scope decision — recover or replace.
Keep comparing the scope.
Altamonte Springs, FL
Commercial roof inspection, replacement, and maintenance for Altamonte Mall, Cranes Roost commercial corridor, and the retail, medical, and office...
Apopka, FL
Commercial roof inspection, replacement, and maintenance for the US-441 commercial corridor, industrial buildings, and the growing commercial base in...
Baldwin Park Orlando, FL
Commercial roof inspections, replacements, and maintenance for Baldwin Park mixed-use retail, office, and multifamily buildings — Orlando's walkable...