Vol. I · No. 01 An Edmond Exteriors Broadside · 73013 (405) 330-0025

Red River

Roofing · Siding · Windows · Doors An Edmond, Oklahoma desk for storm work, claim navigation, and exterior trades on one contract.
Direct line (405) 330-0025
Office 746 Enterprise Dr
Edmond, OK 73013
Filed by neighbors 589 Google reviews
4.7 average
Coverage Edmond · Oklahoma City
Norman · Moore · Yukon
The lead story · Edmond, Okla. · Filed continuously since the last hail event

Two-storm seasons, three trades, and a project manager who answers by name.

The same desk that opens a shingle inspection on a Tuesday morning will, that same week, set faux stone on a porch column and pull a window or door measurement for the back of the house. Roof, siding, windows, doors — one contract, one named manager. The 589 neighbors who have written in agree on the through-line: someone here always picks up the phone.

Hayden answers about the roof in Edmond. Codey Austin steps in when there is an insurance company on the other line. Lynn lays the shingles and the faux stone. Jaime checks the joints. Ben Nix handles the account between calls. Jason Bell, project manager, keeps the schedule honest. The reviews read like a small editorial staff because that is, in fact, how a Red River job runs — not one trade hidden behind a one-person sales pitch, but a roster of named people whose only job is to make sure the property the crew leaves is in better shape than the day they pulled up.

That structure becomes its own kind of trust. When the hailstone broke a window in October and the roof came up totaled, Brooke kept the same contact for the texts back; when the insurance contract needed translating into English, Codey took the time to walk through every step before any signature went on a page. Financing support stays in the same plain-language lane: options explained before the scope gets signed. The point of this front page is not to claim that any of that is unusual. The point is that this is how the work is filed here, in plain language, every time.

A residential roofline at dusk over Edmond, Oklahoma, with a power line and bare branches in the foreground.
Plate I. Edmond, late afternoon — a residential gable awaiting a shingle inspection. Photograph composed for this broadside.
Storm Digest Edmond & Central Oklahoma · Filed since the last hail event

When a hail line comes through, the phone is the first thing to call.

Central Oklahoma does not need an introduction to the season. From mid-April through July the hail line works its way east across the metro, and the I-35 corridor — Edmond, Oklahoma City, Norman, Moore — takes the inside lane. Most damage shows up in the first 48 hours. Some of it — lifted shingles, hairline window cracks, slow ceiling stains — surfaces months later.

The work after a storm is rarely a single trade. A hail event takes the roof, the gutter run, the south-side window frames, the doors, and the painted faux stone all at once. Red River carries roof repair, roof replacement, siding, faux stone, doors, exteriors, and window replacement under one contract, with one project manager assigned per address. That is the practical answer to a hail line: keep the trades on the same page and the homeowner in the same conversation.

If your roof, siding, or window glass was hit in the last storm cycle and you have not yet opened a claim, an inspection is the cleanest place to start. Photos go to your file, repair-versus-replace gets written down in plain language, and the claim path follows facts rather than a sales pitch. The phone above puts you in touch with the same desk that has been answering for the last 589 households.

A storm cell moves over a residential rooftop with hail and wind streaks across the sky.
Plate III. — A hail line moving east across the metro. Photograph composed for this broadside.
Project management makes me feel good and taken care of, knowing that there is going to be a professional managing my project every step of the way. — Ness, Edmond · written into Google Reviews, January
Work Covered Six departments — one contract, one project manager per address
No. I.

Roof repair

Shingle work, leak tracing, flashing details, ridge vents, soft-spot decking. If the damage is local, the repair is local. The inspection writes down the difference.

No. II.

Roof replacement

Full tear-off and re-roof when the inspection finds the underlayment compromised or the storm count past one. Color and shingle line chosen on-site, on a sample board.

No. III.

Storm & hail damage

After-storm inspection with measured photos for your insurance file. The first call before the claim is the one that gets the timing right. No pressure to file.

No. IV.

Siding & faux stone

Lap siding repair, board-and-batten, cement-board panels, and faux stone — the work Lynn and the crew were quoted on for the porch column. Joint detail by Jaime.

No. V.

Windows, doors & exteriors

Window replacement when a hailstone breaks a pane or the seal fails. The exterior package travels with the roof on a storm contract so nothing gets repeated on a separate ladder.

No. VI.

Claim guidance

Codey explains the contract, financing options, and the steps with the insurance company before signatures go on the page. Photos, scope, supplements, sign-off — written down, not assumed.

Word From Neighbors Letters as filed on Google · printed verbatim

Five months of Edmond reviews read like a roster of project managers.

Hayden did an outstanding job helping me with my roof in Edmond Oklahoma. From start to finish, he was professional, knowledgeable, and easy to work with. He took the time to explain everything clearly, answered all my questions, and made sure the job was done right. The whole process was smooth and stress-free thanks to him.

Filed · 2 months ago · 5 stars — Jacob, Edmond (verified Google reviewer)

Outstanding service and customer service. Codey Austin, sales representative, took the time to explain the contract and steps with the Insurance Company. When the project started, Jason Bell (project manager) took the time to explain the steps and procedures with the roof. The whole project was completed with the crew's outstanding work.

Filed · 2 months ago · 5 stars — Peter C., Edmond (verified Google reviewer)

We've been working with Codey since the end of October when a hail storm broke one of our windows and totaled our roof. He's been great to work with — very communicative throughout the whole process and quick to respond to texts. We have been very happy with the work done on our house.

Filed · 3 months ago · 5 stars — Brooke G., Edmond (verified Google reviewer)
Three of 589 reviews on file. Read the full record on Google Maps →
The Process From the first phone call to the last sign-off — three movements
I.

Call & inspection

The office answers. We send someone out for a walk of the roof, the gutter run, the south-side windows, and the painted exterior. Photos are written into a file you can keep, claim or no claim.

II.

Findings & options

You get the repair-or-replace question in plain language — with the photos. If an insurance claim or financing question is the right next step, Codey opens the conversation before signatures go anywhere.

III.

Scheduled work & sign-off

Jason or the project manager keeps the schedule honest, the crew on the same page, and the property clean at end-of-day. Sign-off happens after the homeowner walks the work, not before.

Film Section A 15-second on-the-roof reel — in composition
Dispatch For the desk — the classified form below sends a question, not a contract

Send the question. A project manager will write back.

If the roof took a hit last storm cycle, if the back-of-house windows are fogging at the seal, if the painted siding is starting to lift — tell us in a sentence and we will write back the same business day with whether an inspection is the next step.

  • Inspections cost nothing and put photos in a file you can keep.
  • If a claim is the right path, Codey opens the conversation with the carrier first.
  • If a repair is the right path, the repair is the answer — not a replacement quote.

This preview form on the broadside is not connected yet. To reach Red River right now, please call (405) 330-0025 or write info@redriveroklahoma.com.

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