Service Area
Nine Central Virginia counties we know by heart
We don't list cities for SEO. Each page below is written from the actual jobs we've done in that county. The homes, the trees, the patterns we see again and again. Same pricing, same crew, same standards across the entire service area.
Albemarle County
Albemarle County wraps around the City of Charlottesville and runs from Crozet at its western edge to Keswick on the east, north past Earlysville and south past Esmont. Around 115,000 residents, it's the most populous county we serve. The housing mix is the most varied of anywhere we work. Rural estates, vineyard properties, dense newer subdivisions like Forest Lakes and Old Trail, and architect-designed retreat homes scattered across the western mountains.
Barboursville
Barboursville is home base. Our shop sits off Greenwood Farms Court, ten minutes from the Barboursville Vineyards and the Madison-Orange-Greene corner that defines the rolling country we work in every day. The village has under 200 households inside the unincorporated boundary, but the surrounding rural Orange County zip code stretches into thousands of homes. Old farmhouses, new subdivisions on what used to be tobacco land, and weekend places owned by Charlottesville and Northern Virginia families.
Charlottesville
Charlottesville's mix of UVA-era brick colonials, post-war ranches in Belmont, and newer construction up on Pantops gives us three completely different gutter conversations on most weeks. The city's aggressive shade canopy. Especially the tulip poplars and white oaks that line so many streets. Keeps us busier here than anywhere else we work.
Culpeper
Culpeper is the rare Virginia county that splits cleanly into two gutter conversations. Inside the town's roughly 20,000 residents you have a historic Main Street district where 1880s through 1920s homes still wear their original cornice work and built-in box gutters, plus newer subdivisions like Greens of Carrington Hill, Redwood Lakes, and the Gibson Mill area. Outside the town the county opens up to about 52,000 people total spread across country properties along Routes 522, 229, 3, and 15, with Brandy Station and the open Civil War battlefields shaping the ridge-line west of town. Both halves have gutter problems, and they barely overlap.
Fluvanna County
Fluvanna County is shaped by water. The Rivanna and James rivers form most of its borders, and Lake Monticello (the largest residential community in the county) is its center of gravity. Around 30,000 residents, with the gated Lake Monticello community holding nearly half of them. Beyond the lake, Fluvanna runs into rural land along Routes 53 and 15, with Palmyra serving as the small county seat.
Greene County
Greene County is small, only about 20,000 residents, and the county seat. Stanardsville. Is a single quiet downtown that hasn't changed shape much in fifty years. The county runs from Ruckersville at its southern end (heavily commuter-oriented to Charlottesville) up into the Blue Ridge foothills toward Shenandoah National Park. The defining feature here is pine. Large planted stands of loblolly and Virginia pine across the county leave their fingerprint on every gutter system.
Louisa County
Louisa County is one of the larger counties we serve geographically. About 38,000 residents spread across hundreds of square miles. The Town of Louisa is small and historic; Mineral and Gum Spring are even smaller. The defining feature of Louisa is Lake Anna, the second-largest lake in Virginia, which anchors a substantial waterfront-residential economy on the eastern side of the county. Beyond the lake, Louisa is working farmland, small subdivisions, and Civil War history quietly woven into the landscape.
Madison
Madison County is the most rural piece of our service area. Fewer than 14,000 people across the entire county and a tiny downtown along Route 29. The land is high country: rolling pasture stepping up into the foot of the Blue Ridge, with Old Rag Mountain as the dramatic backdrop visible from many properties. Homes here trend toward farmhouses, hunting cabins, family homesteads passed down generations, and a growing number of architect-designed retreat homes hidden up gravel drives.
Orange
The Town of Orange is the county seat. About five thousand people inside the corporate limits and another thirty-something thousand spread across the rural county. The historic district downtown along Main Street has 1880s-to-1920s storefronts and homes with original cornice details and box gutters. Outside town, Orange opens up into horse farms, working agriculture, and weekend country properties owned by people from D.C. and Richmond.
Outside our service area?
We work within roughly 60 minutes of our Barboursville shop. If you're outside our standard service area but close to it, give us a call. We sometimes take work in adjacent counties when the project is the right fit.