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Cumberland County, NC · seat Fayetteville · NOAA 2021–2025

Commercial Roofing in Cumberland County, NC

Cumberland County's commercial-roof risk is a wind story. NOAA logged 70 roofing-relevant events here across 2021-2025, and 64 were wind — thunderstorm gusts to 62 mph — alongside a tropical-storm event that posted a $1,000,000 county damage estimate in September 2022. On the big distribution, warehouse, and manufacturing roofs around Fayetteville and the I-95 corridor, that means uplift, not hail, is the controlling failure mode. Southeast Commercial Roofing documents those claims to carrier standard. Call (866) 487-8572.

70
Roof-relevant events
64
Wind events
5
Hail events
62
Max wind (mph)
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Cumberland County · NOAA storm events · 2021–2025

Cumberland County commercial-roof storm record, year by year.

Roofing-relevant events (hail, thunderstorm/high wind, tornado) recorded in Cumberland County by the NOAA Storm Events Database, 2021 through 2025 (2025 partial). Hail in inches diameter; wind in mph. The September 2022 tropical-storm event is discussed in the prose below.

YearHailWindTornadoMax hail (in)Max wind (mph)
20212301.00″50 mph
202211200.88″58 mph
202311901.00″54 mph
2024015062 mph
202511501.00″53 mph

Source: NOAA Storm Events Database (NCEI), 2021–2025. Counts reflect roofing-relevant event types only; tropical-storm lines are noted separately. See the full North Carolina storm dataset for all 100 counties.

01 · A wind county, not a hail county

Cumberland County's record is 64 wind events to 6 of everything else.

The defining fact about commercial-roof risk in Cumberland County is the lopsided shape of its storm record. Across 2021-2025, NOAA logged 70 roofing-relevant events here, and 64 of them were wind — overwhelmingly thunderstorm wind — against just 5 hail events and zero tornadoes. That is a fundamentally different risk profile than the mountain and Piedmont counties to the west, where large hail drives claims. In Fayetteville and the surrounding coastal-plain terrain, the peril that actually reaches roofs is straight-line and gust wind, year after year, with the maximum recorded gust in the file at 62 mph in 2024.

For low-slope commercial roofs, a wind-dominated record changes where you look and what you reinforce. Wind loads concentrate at perimeters, corners, and parapets — the high-uplift zones where mechanically-attached single-ply membranes lift first — long before they trouble the field of the roof. The damage signature is opened laps, backed-out fasteners, lifted or peeled edge metal, and displaced coping, not the bruising and fracture patterns hail leaves. On the large flat roofs that dominate Cumberland County's commercial base, that is the inspection a wind claim turns on, and it is frequently invisible from the ground. See how Cumberland's numbers compare statewide in the full North Carolina storm dataset.

02 · The 2022 tropical-storm event — $1 million

September 30, 2022 carries the county's single largest damage estimate.

The largest property-damage figure anywhere in Cumberland County's 2021-2025 file does not come from a thunderstorm. It comes from a tropical-storm event on September 30, 2022 — the remnants of Hurricane Ian moving up the Atlantic coastal plain — which NOAA logs with a $1,000,000 county damage estimate. A tropical remnant over the flat, well-drained terrain around Fayetteville is a sustained wind-driven-rain event: it works the perimeter attachment zones, overwhelms internal drains and scuppers sized for ordinary storms, and pushes water under flashings and around penetrations on low-slope roofs. Many buildings do not fail visibly during the storm; they develop lifted edge metal and opened seams that turn into slow leaks over the following months — and those are the claims still working through carriers afterward.

That September 2022 tropical line is the only tropical-storm event in Cumberland County's 2021-2025 NOAA record; every other year in the file is thunderstorm-wind and hail. It still matters disproportionately for claim strategy, because tropical-era water intrusion and ordinary thunderstorm-wind damage often land on the same roof within a single policy year, and a carrier will look for any opening to attribute a loss to an earlier, non-covered, or pre-existing condition. The discipline that holds a Cumberland County claim together is matching each damage signature to its specific NOAA event date — exactly the public record an adjuster references. Reference our North Carolina insurance-claims workflow for how that documentation is built.

03 · Fayetteville's commercial roof base

A logistics and military-adjacent market full of large flat roofs.

Cumberland County's commercial building stock is shaped by two forces: Fort Bragg (the U.S. Army installation renamed back to Fort Bragg in February 2025 after a period as Fort Liberty, one of the largest military bases in the world and the county's dominant economic engine), and the county's position on Interstate 95 as a logistics corridor between the Northeast and Florida. The result is a deep inventory of large low-slope roofs — distribution centers, warehouses, manufacturing plants, retail big-box, and the dense medical-office and institutional base anchored by Cape Fear Valley Health and Fayetteville State University. The county seat, Fayetteville, plus Hope Mills and Spring Lake, concentrate that commercial fabric, and it is precisely the building type a wind-dominated storm record threatens most: wide membranes with long perimeters and corner zones exposed to uplift.

That base is the reason our work here skews toward storage and warehouse facility roofing and industrial facility reroof and roof replacement. On big-box distribution roofs we favor mechanically-attached or fully-adhered TPO and EPDM with engineered fastening patterns rated to the building's exposure category; on heavier industrial decks, modified bitumen and built-up roofing; and standing-seam metal or silicone restoration coatings where the substrate and budget suit. For an operating facility, we phase reroofs in place so production and shipping continue — the model we describe on our commercial flat roofing page. Per NRCA wind-design guidance, the controlling decision on these roofs is the perimeter and corner fastening pattern, and we spec it to the actual building rather than a one-size default.

04 · Permits, code & documenting a claim

What makes a Cumberland County claim pay: a documented cause of loss.

Commercial reroof and roof-replacement work in Cumberland County is permitted through the local authority having jurisdiction — the City of Fayetteville inspections department inside city limits, and Cumberland County permitting and inspections in the unincorporated areas and smaller towns — all enforcing the North Carolina State Building Code. Crews working at height fall under federal OSHA 29 CFR 1910.28 fall-protection rules. On a full tear-off, current NC energy-code insulation minimums are frequently triggered, which is where ordinance-and-law coverage becomes a live line item on a storm claim rather than an out-of-pocket cost — we itemize it separately so an adjuster can evaluate it cleanly.

A Cumberland County commercial claim turns on documentation quality, and a wind-and-tropical record makes that doubly true. Our adjuster-ready package includes drone imagery of the full roof with annotated damage, core-sample photography showing the existing system and damage cross-section, infrared or electrical-conductance moisture mapping, decking inspection, and a scope-of-work cost breakdown in carrier-preferred format — paired with RCV/ACV and depreciation worksheets. Every damage line is cross-referenced to the specific event date and county in the public NOAA record carriers themselves reference. The RCV versus ACV gap is especially live on older Fayetteville-area commercial roofs: on a 20-year membrane at heavy depreciation, the difference between full replacement cost and depreciated actual cash value runs into the hundreds of thousands, so we document both scopes on every claim.

We work the claim whichever way ownership prefers — direct with the carrier's staff or independent adjuster, or alongside a public adjuster — and the technical documentation is identical regardless of who negotiates. If a facility was hit, start with our storm damage response and North Carolina insurance-claim workflows. For statewide context see the North Carolina commercial roofing overview, and for nearby metro work see Raleigh commercial roofing. Southeast Commercial Roofing is an NCLBGC commercial contractor serving Cumberland County and the broader NC, SC, GA, and TN footprint — call (866) 487-8572 for a damage assessment.

Answers · Cumberland County

Commercial roofing in Cumberland County, NC — common questions.

Who provides commercial roofing in Cumberland County and Fayetteville, NC?
Southeast Commercial Roofing serves Cumberland County and Fayetteville as an NCLBGC commercial roofing contractor. We are certified applicators for Carlisle, Firestone, GAF, Johns Manville, and IKO, installing TPO, EPDM, standing-seam metal, modified bitumen, built-up roofing, and silicone/acrylic coatings on warehouses, distribution centers, manufacturing plants, medical offices, and military-adjacent commercial buildings. Call (866) 487-8572 for a damage assessment or detailed bid.
What is the biggest storm threat to commercial roofs in Cumberland County?
Wind, decisively. Over 2021-2025 NOAA logged 70 roofing-relevant events in Cumberland County, and 64 of them were wind — overwhelmingly thunderstorm wind, with a maximum recorded gust of 62 mph in 2024. Hail is comparatively rare here (only 5 events, none above 1.0 inch), and no tornado was logged in the window. One tropical-storm event also struck: a September 2022 line carrying a $1,000,000 county damage estimate — the single largest property-damage figure in the county's 2021-2025 file. For low-slope roofs the dominant failure mode is perimeter and corner uplift, not hail puncture.
How damaging was the September 2022 tropical storm for Cumberland County roofs?
In NOAA's record, the tropical-storm event of September 30, 2022 (the remnants of Hurricane Ian moving up the coastal plain) carries a $1,000,000 damage estimate for Cumberland County — the single largest property-damage figure in the county's 2021-2025 file. For commercial roofs that was a wind-driven-rain and drainage event: it lifted edge metal, opened laps at perimeters, overwhelmed internal drains and scuppers, and forced water under flashings and at penetrations on Fayetteville-area flat roofs.
How many storm events has Cumberland County had since 2021?
NOAA logged 70 roofing-relevant storm events in Cumberland County over 2021-2025: 5 hail, 64 wind (almost entirely thunderstorm wind), and 0 tornado, plus one tropical-storm event. The maximum recorded wind is 62 mph (2024) and the maximum hail is 1.0 inch — quarter size. 2025 figures are partial-year and already show 15 thunderstorm-wind events.
Do you handle commercial roof insurance claim documentation in Cumberland County?
Yes. Adjuster-ready storm documentation is central to our work in Fayetteville and across Cumberland County. Packages include drone imagery, core samples, infrared moisture mapping, decking inspection, a carrier-format scope of work, RCV/ACV and depreciation worksheets, and ordinance-and-law line items. Every damage line is cross-referenced to the specific NOAA event date and county. See our insurance-claims workflow for North Carolina or call (866) 487-8572.
What roof systems work best for Cumberland County's wind exposure?
Because Cumberland County's record is wind-dominated rather than hail-dominated, we spec for uplift first: wind-rated edge metal, enhanced perimeter and corner fastening, and redundant overflow drainage. On the large distribution and warehouse roofs common around Fayetteville and the I-95 corridor we favor mechanically-attached or fully-adhered TPO and EPDM with engineered fastening patterns; on heavier industrial decks, modified bitumen and BUR; and standing-seam metal or silicone restoration coatings where the substrate suits. The detail is matched to the building's actual exposure, not a default assembly.
Do you roof distribution centers and warehouses near Fayetteville and the I-95 corridor?
Yes — large low-slope distribution, warehouse, and manufacturing roofs are core work for us. Cumberland County's location on Interstate 95 between the Northeast and Florida makes it a logistics corridor, and big-box flat roofs concentrate the exact uplift and drainage risks NOAA's wind record reflects. We handle full reroofs, phased in-place reroofs that keep operations running, recovers, and storm-damage claims, and we cross-reference our storage-facility and industrial-reroof workflows for the specifics.
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We respond to commercial roof wind and tropical-storm damage across Cumberland County, Fayetteville, and the I-95 corridor. Adjuster-ready insurance documentation, drone imagery, infrared moisture survey, detailed carrier-ready scope. 24/7 emergency response.