Licensed CSLB #1106627 4.9 Google · 80+ Reviews Battleground, WA
Over a garage, flat-roof addition, or condo building — rooftop decks built on structural review, waterproof membrane, and code-compliant railings.

Custom Rooftop Deck Construction

Creating covered outdoor areas you can use in every season
2026
Rooftop Deck Construction Licensed: CSLB #1106627
Rooftop Deck Construction Insured and Bonded
Rooftop Deck Construction

Why Choose Us

CUSTOM PATIO COVER DESIGN FOR YOUR HOME
EXPERIENCE WITH DECKS, PATIOS, AND ENTRYWAYS
MATERIALS CHOOSEN FOR PNW WEATHER
CLEAN INTEGRATION WITH ROOF AND SIDING
CLEAR PRICING AND REALISTIC TIMELINES

Trusted

We build patio covers with careful planning
[15+] Years Building Decks Across Clark County & Portland Metro
[100+] Custom Outdoor Living Projects Completed
[CSLB] License #1106627 — Licensed, Bonded & Insured

Our Works

Client
Reviews

GOOGLE GUARANTEED
Google Reviews 5 star rating for LGC Remodeling — Mark T., Seattle homeowner
a year ago
The Garage DoorLGP Bilders and Service was excellent. They showed up on time and were very helpful. They were quick efficient and very cost effective as well. I would use them again right away
Google Reviews 5 star rating for LGC Remodeling — William Tikhonenko
a year ago
I had Larry do a lot of work for me recently, I’m proud to say I don’t regret set paying what I payed, he took care of all of the dry rot I had in my subfloor then replaced the Sheetrock that was damaged and as well as the baseboards on my home, I also hired him again to build a deck for my house which he did an outstanding job, he’s capable of a lot and I highly recommend hiring him for your next project :)
Google Reviews 5 star rating for LGC Remodeling — Ruvim Gaidaichuk
a year ago
If I could give more than 5 stars I would. I recommend him to all. Larry does the greatest job from the numerous handy men I have hired in the past. With Larry I don’t need to keep looking for someone to do a spectacular job Larry is just that guy.
Google Reviews 5 star rating for LGC Remodeling — Davyd Brovkin
a year ago
LGC Remodeling delivered exceptional results on my project. Professional, detail-oriented, and within budget. Communication was excellent. Highly recommend for any home improvement needs!
Google Reviews 5 star rating for LGC Remodeling — Anatolii Dobrolevskyi
a year ago
We're glad we went with Larry's team because they did an awesome job helping us out with some of our projects that we had, Larry does a great job communicating and they did an outstanding job replacing windows and painted our house!
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Blog, Announcements, and More!
“Cold Flooring” in the Sun: Myth or Reality?

“Cold Flooring” in the Sun: Myth or Reality?

In summer, you want to step out onto the terrace barefoot and avoid the heat. This leads to a popular question: is there a deck that doesn’t heat up at all in the sun? The short answer is no; any material will heat up in direct sunlight. However, the difference in heat can be quite […]

How to care for a wood or wood-polymer composite deck

How to care for a wood or wood-polymer composite deck

Yes, both wood and modern composite decks are designed to withstand the elements. But their lifespan and appearance directly depend on regular cleaning, proper chemical treatments, and careful winter maintenance. In the US, manufacturers’ recommendations are consistent: dirt and organic matter are the main enemies; harsh cleaning products and excessive water pressure are a common […]

Is Your Deck Poorly Built? Three Warning Signs to Check Today

Is Your Deck Poorly Built? Three Warning Signs to Check Today

A terrace isn’t just for relaxation. It’s a space subject to loads, wind, moisture, and cyclical heating. Errors in joints accumulate and then suddenly erupt: a wobbly fence, a sagging span, a damp “house joint.” Therefore, the reaction “we’ll figure it out some other time” is inappropriate. Our blog covers many topics related to home […]

Spring is the best time for a deck: start the season right

Spring is the best time for a deck: start the season right

Building a deck involves more than just choosing deck boards and railings. It also involves weather windows, soil management, delivery schedules, permits, and inspections. In spring, these factors combine to create a more predictable picture: the ground has thawed, temperatures have stabilized, and permit departments and contractors aren’t yet overwhelmed with summer requests. As a […]

Steel deck framing: the fire-safe solution your home really needs

Steel deck framing: the fire-safe solution your home really needs

Forest fires are becoming a reality in an increasing number of regions. Therefore, the discussion of decking has long since moved beyond aesthetics. The key lies not only in the decking, but in the foundation itself. It is the framework that determines the fire resistance of the entire structure and influences how it will respond […]

FAQ

01
Can my existing garage support a rooftop deck?
Probably not without reinforcement. Most garages were built as "garages" — roof rated for snow load and roofer traffic, not occupancy. Structural engineer review before quoting is standard for us.
02
How much does structural upgrade typically cost?
Highly variable — $8,000 to $30,000 depending on what the engineer specifies (sistering joists vs replacing ridge beam vs new interior posts). We quote the deck separately so you see both numbers clearly.
03
Will a rooftop deck void my roof warranty?
It depends on your existing roof warranty and how the deck interfaces with the membrane. Floating pedestal systems preserve most warranties. Anchored systems often require warranty-specific approval from the roofer. We coordinate with your roofing company upfront.
04
Can you build over a torch-down or rubber roof?
TPO and PVC membranes are ideal for rooftop decks — durable, predictable lifespan, easy to repair. Torch-down and EPDM can host decks but have shorter typical lifespan below the deck. We assess during the on-site visit.
05
Do rooftop decks in Portland need permits?
Yes, without exception. Portland PP&D requires a permit for every rooftop deck regardless of size. Engineer-stamped drawings required. Plan 3-6 weeks for review.
06
Is a Pearl District condo rooftop deck possible?
In some buildings, yes — depends on HOA rules, existing roof structure, and access. We've done several. Start with your HOA's written design review process and we can quote once approved.

What Is a Rooftop Deck?

A rooftop deck is a usable outdoor living surface built on top of a building’s flat or low-pitch roof — a garage, a single-story addition, a condo building, or a purpose-built rooftop structure. The structural building supports both dead loads (deck framing, decking, railings, furniture) and live loads (people, snow, wind uplift), which is why every rooftop deck needs engineer review before construction.

We’ve built rooftop decks across Portland’s SE, NE, and NW quadrants, on garage conversions in Vancouver, and on Pearl District condo buildings. Typical sizes run 100-400 sqft. Budgets run $25,000-$100,000+ depending on complexity.

Rooftop decks are our most technically demanding service. The stakes are high — a waterproofing failure floods the space below. A structural oversight creates safety issues. We take it seriously.

Structural Requirements

Rule zero: the existing roof must support the deck’s loads. Most garage roofs were built as “garage roofs” — rated for snow load and roofer traffic only. Adding 10-15 psf of deck dead load plus 40 psf residential live load (people, furniture) usually exceeds original design capacity. So: structural upgrade first, deck second.

Common upgrades required:

  • Sistered or deeper rafters/joists — doubling existing framing or switching to engineered LVL
  • Reinforced load path — added posts inside the building, transfer beam below the roof
  • New ridge or purlin — for wider spans
  • Foundation check — if added load transfers to foundation

We don’t do structural upgrade work ourselves (that’s a separate GC or engineer-led scope), but we coordinate the sequence. Typical path: structural engineer reviews existing framing → designs upgrade → separate contractor executes upgrade → we come in after inspection for the deck.

Waterproofing — Don’t Compromise Here

The deck sits on top of a roof membrane (TPO, PVC, liquid-applied, or rubberized asphalt). The membrane is the only thing keeping water out of the space below. Penetrating it (for anchor points, post bases, drainage) risks leaks.

Two approaches:

1. Floating / suspended system (preferred). Pedestal pavers, adjustable pedestals under Trex-style decking, or suspended deck framing on pre-manufactured pedestals. Zero membrane penetrations. Easy to repair or lift for inspection. Slightly higher cost than traditional deck framing.

2. Anchored / penetration system. Post bases bolted through the roof membrane. Requires specific flashing + re-sealing procedures. Lower cost, higher long-term risk. Acceptable only when existing roof warranty permits (verify with roofing company).

For most clients we recommend floating pedestal systems. The $500-1,500 premium per project is worth the warranty preservation and leak-free guarantee.

Railings — Code Requirements

Rooftop decks trigger strict railing code because fall height is significant. Oregon and Washington residential code:

  • Minimum 36″ height (single-family residential); 42″ for commercial or multi-unit buildings
  • Balusters no more than 4″ spacing (no 4″ sphere passage)
  • Structural load: 200 lbf concentrated + 50 plf distributed (railings have to hold someone pressing against them)

We use one of three railing systems:

  • Aluminum (powder-coated black most common) — $30-50/linear ft. Classic, durable, code-compliant without engineering.
  • Tempered glass with aluminum posts — $50-85/linear ft. View-preserving. Popular on condo rooftops with skyline views.
  • Stainless cable railing — $45-75/linear ft. Modern, minimalist. Post strength requirements stringent — we reinforce the supporting framing accordingly.

Wood railings are generally not recommended on rooftops — weather exposure is extreme, and wood fasteners need frequent inspection.

Rooftop Deck Process

Step 1: Structural review (pre-contract). Before quoting, we coordinate with a structural engineer to assess whether your roof can support a deck. Engineer fee typically $800-1,500. If upgrade is required, you get a separate scope from a GC or framing specialist before we come in.

Step 2: Waterproofing verification. We coordinate with your roofing company (or install new membrane if needed). Warranty alignment is critical — deck installation must preserve existing roof warranty.

Step 3: Design. Layout including pedestal positions, access stairs, railings. Drainage plan — rooftop decks must not pond water; we slope the decking surface while keeping walking surface level.

Step 4: Permit. Portland PP&D requires permit for all rooftop decks. Engineer stamp on submittal. Fee $250-600 typical. HOA review if condo building.

Step 5: Installation. Pedestal pavers or suspended framing, decking boards, railing system, lighting integration. We work in weather windows — rooftop work is weather-dependent.

Step 6: Final inspection + waterproofing seal-off. Roofer re-inspects any contact points. We walk the deck with you, document the floating design and maintenance recommendations.

Timeline: 8-16 weeks from contract to completion (longer than standard deck because of engineering coordination and weather dependencies).

Rooftop Deck Pricing — 2025 Ranges

All-in pricing (excluding structural upgrade if required):

Project Typical price range
Pedestal paver system, 200 sqft $18,000 – $28,000
Composite deck on pedestals, 250 sqft + aluminum railings $28,000 – $42,000
Composite deck + glass railings + LED lighting, 300 sqft $45,000 – $65,000
Luxury Ipe + cable railings + built-in bench, 400 sqft $65,000 – $110,000
Condo common-area deck (500+ sqft, full code compliance) $75,000 – $180,000+

Additional costs if needed:

  • Structural upgrade (separate scope): $8,000 – $30,000
  • Engineer stamp: $800 – $1,500
  • New roof membrane: $5,000 – $20,000
  • Access stair from floor below: $3,000 – $8,000

Common Rooftop Deck Use Cases

Portland garage conversion — most common. Single-car garage with flat roof becomes 200-300 sqft rooftop deck accessed from second floor. Total project (structural + deck) often $40-80K.

Pearl District / Slabtown condo — pedestal paver on existing rooftop, glass railings, view to downtown or Willamette River. HOA coordination mandatory. $35-65K typical.

Vancouver single-story addition — flat or low-pitch roof over living room addition becomes rooftop deck accessed from master bedroom. Often includes pergola. $50-90K total.

NW Portland luxury home — custom purpose-built rooftop on multi-story home. Ipe, glass, built-ins. $80-150K+.

About LGC Remodeling & Larry Zagoriy

LGC Remodeling is led by Larry Zagoriy, owner and lead contractor. Larry has been building decks, patios, pergolas, and outdoor living spaces across Clark County and the Portland metro for over 15 years, with 100+ completed outdoor living projects.

CSLB License #1106627 — Licensed, Bonded & Insured. Verify license at California State Licensing Board.

Call Larry directly at (360) 356-6008 or email info@lgcremodeling.com for a free on-site estimate. LGC Remodeling, 1616 NW 13th Street, Battle Ground, WA 98604.

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Rooftop Deck Construction
Ready to cover your patio or deck?

    • Backyard gazebo
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    • Custom Pergola Construction
    • Deck remodel
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    • Deck stair case
    • Deck surfacing
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    • Fence Installation & Custom Fence Building
    • Guard rail
    • Multi level deck
    • New Deck Construction
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    • Rooftop Deck Construction
    • Trex decking
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