Tweed Heads, NSW
Roof, exterior and grounds services in Tweed Heads
Hall Restorations works across Tweed Heads, Tweed Heads South, Banora Point and the river precinct. Salt off Colorbond, mould off render, gutters cleared before the next big easterly.
Northern Rivers home — descriptive placeholder until Josh supplies real photosTweed Heads is where the salt meets the eucalyptus. The houses on the river precinct and the headland get hit by every easterly that comes off the ocean, so the exterior wears differently than the hinterland blocks. Colorbond gets salt streaks, render gets mould on the south side, gutters get a slug of cocos-palm fronds every wet season.
The Tweed Heads coastal strip is what we know best, because it’s where the work pattern is most consistent. Salt-laden easterlies hit the headland and the river precinct, the cocos palms drop continuously through the year, and the humidity sits high enough that mould doesn’t really go away in winter — it just slows down.
What we look at on every Tweed Heads quote: the prevailing wind exposure of each wall, the proximity to mature cocos palms, the age and condition of the roof coating if it’s Colorbond, and the pitch and access. A Banora Point hill house with a steep pitched roof needs a different setup than a single-storey on Coral Street.
We work residential primarily. Smaller strata or duplex jobs we’ll do happily; large apartment complexes we’d rather refer to a specialist with rope-access kit. Our crew is set up for ladder-and-roof access, not abseil. We’ll tell you on the call.
The Tweed Shire protected-tree rules matter for any garden pruning involving the big eucalyptus or melaleuca on residential blocks. Council mapping changes, and the rules around specific species evolve — we check before we start rather than assume.
What we see most
Common Tweed Heads jobs
- Salt streaks and chalking on Colorbond roofs and cladding (north-east-facing walls take the worst of the easterlies)
- Render mould on south- and east-facing walls, particularly under verandahs and behind trees
- Cocos-palm fronds and seed clusters dropping into gutters and onto roofs
- Driveway algae and mould in the shaded sections, especially close to the Tweed River where everything stays damp longer
- Apartment-block balcony glass and exterior cleaning (separate quote; not all addresses suit our crew's setup)
Working in Tweed Heads
Tweed Heads sits inside Tweed Shire Council. The Tweed River frontage and the headland are where the salt damage is worst; the inland streets behind the highway are sheltered enough that the wear pattern's more like Banora. We've worked enough houses up here to know that the soft-wash detergent ratio you'd use in Murwillumbah is too gentle for a Colorbond roof at Tweed Heads — different climate, different surface treatment.
Nearby coverage
We also work
- Banora Point
- Kingscliff
- Murwillumbah
FAQ
Tweed Heads questions
Can you do the roof and exterior in one visit?
Yes, and it usually works out better that way. Roof first, then the walls, then a downpipe flush. Cuts the call-out cost and means everything dries at the same time.
Do you do strata work on apartment blocks?
We do common-property work for smaller strata schemes where a small crew is the right fit. Large multi-storey apartment blocks usually want a specialist with rope-access or scaffold; we'll be honest about what we're set up for when you call.
How does the salt air affect what we should be doing for our roof and exterior?
Anything within a few hundred metres of the ocean or river mouth needs more frequent attention than inland properties. The salt accelerates mould growth on render, chalks Colorbond coatings, and corrodes any unprotected metal. Annual cycle on the gutters and roof at a minimum, plus a soft-wash on the exterior every 18–24 months keeps it in front of the problem.
Booking in Tweed Heads?
Call 0401 364 405 or send a quote request. We'll come back with a written number for your block, not a starting price.