The Cool-Shingle Conversation in an Older Neighborhood
One homeowner in an older part of Brookston called us in late July after her second floor bedrooms had become unusable in the afternoon. Her roof was 19 years old, dark brown, and absolutely cooking. She assumed she needed more attic insulation, and she might have, but the bigger issue was a black roof deck soaking up sun all day with marginal ventilation underneath.
We pulled an attic temperature reading north of 140 degrees on inspection day. Her options were not exotic. We talked through a reflective asphalt shingle in a lighter shade, paired with a proper ridge and soffit ventilation rebuild. Cool rated shingles can knock surface temperatures down by 20 to 40 degrees on a hot day, which translates into a measurable but modest cooling bill drop, usually somewhere in the 7 to 15 percent range for a house like hers. She went with a light driftwood color and an Owens Corning system. Two summers later she told us the upstairs is finally usable, and her July electric bill dropped about 11 percent year over year. Not life changing money, but the roof was getting replaced anyway, so the green upgrade essentially came along for the ride.
What surprised her, honestly, was how the lighter shingle looked on the house. She had been worried about losing the warm tone of the old roof. Once the new system was on, her HOA neighbor walked over and asked who installed it, and three weeks later we were back on that block doing a second tear off. That tends to be how green roofing spreads in Brookston. One visible job, a few honest conversations across the fence, and suddenly half a street is asking real questions about reflectivity and ventilation instead of just picking whatever color the last roofer had on the truck.
The Metal Roof That Outlived Three Hailstorms
A couple out near a wooded subdivision had filed two insurance claims in five years for hail. Their carrier was getting twitchy, and the homeowners were exhausted. They asked whether standing seam metal roofing was actually worth the price jump from architectural shingles.
We laid it out honestly. Metal usually runs 2 to 3 times the cost of a standard asphalt tear off, but it lasts 50 plus years, reflects significantly more solar heat, and most panels contain 25 to 95 percent recycled steel. At the end of its life, the entire roof is recyclable instead of headed to a dump. For a couple planning to stay 20 plus years, the math works. They picked a medium gray standing seam in a Kynar finish. The next spring, a storm rolled through and dropped quarter sized hail across their block. Their neighbors filed claims. Their roof had cosmetic dimples on one valley pan and zero functional damage. No claim, no deductible, no week of tarps.
The Solar Question We Get Almost Weekly
A homeowner in a newer development asked whether he should do solar shingles or a traditional rack mounted panel array on a fresh roof. He had heard solar shingles were sleeker and more integrated. He had also heard they cost a fortune.
Both are true. We walked his roof, checked the southern exposure, and ran through the numbers. For his pitch and orientation, traditional panels on top of a 50 year underlayment and architectural shingle system gave him better watt per dollar performance and easier service down the road. Solar shingles made more sense aesthetically but added significant cost with less output. He chose panels, and we coordinated the roof replacement so the solar installer mounted into fresh decking with proper flashing boots. Two years in, he is producing more than he uses from April through September.
The piece a lot of homeowners miss is the timing. Putting solar on a roof with eight or ten years left is a setup for an expensive panel removal and reset job down the line. Brookston Metal Roofing would rather see a customer replace the roof first, even if the solar install slides a year or two, than watch them pay twice for the same square footage. We have had that conversation enough times that we now bring it up before the homeowner does.
Recycled-Content Shingles on a Tight Budget
Not every green decision is a premium upgrade. A young family in a starter home wanted something more responsible than basic three tab but could not stretch to metal or solar. We talked through Malarkey shingles, which use recycled rubber and plastic in the shingle itself and rely on smog reducing granules. Each square ends up keeping a meaningful amount of waste out of landfills.
The price difference over a basic architectural shingle was modest, maybe 5 to 8 percent on the total job. They got a Class 4 impact rated product as part of the package, which also earned them a small discount on their homeowner policy. We wrote more about that tradeoff in our piece on Class 4 impact resistant shingles if you want the deeper version. The point is, green roofing does not have to mean spending double. Sometimes it just means picking a smarter product in the same price tier.
Quick Notes from Other Green Jobs
- A flat roof addition where we specified a white TPO membrane instead of black EPDM, dropping interior summer temps in that room by a noticeable margin.
- A 1940s home where we kept and reused the original cedar fascia after replacing the field shingles, cutting jobsite waste meaningfully.
- A Brookston duplex owner who asked us about ventilation as a green issue, which it absolutely is. Better airflow means shingles last longer, which means fewer replacements over a lifetime. Our notes on roof ventilation problems dig into that.
- A small church property where we diverted nearly four tons of tear off debris to a shingle recycling facility instead of the county landfill, at a cost difference the trustees called negligible.
What These Stories Have in Common
Every one of these homeowners started with a different goal. Lower bills. Fewer claims. Less waste. More longevity. None of them ended up with the same roof. That is the honest truth about green roofing in central Indiana. The right answer depends on your roof pitch, your attic, your trees, your timeline, and your budget. If your existing roof has another seven good years left, we will tell you that and revisit the conversation later. The greenest roof, after all, is usually the one you do not have to tear off yet.