Commercial roof replacement, repair, and inspection for Indianapolis retail buildings — Castleton Square Mall, Greenwood Park Mall, Hamilton Town Center, and the Fashion Mall at Keystone — with tenant-operation scheduling and same-day dry-in.

What defines us is not only the scale of our work but the people who make it possible.
Every roof we build reflects care, skill, and pride from a team that treats each project like their own.
At Commercial Roofers Indianapolis, roofing is about people as much as it is about performance. Our full-time, in-house workforce is the most certified team under one roof in Indiana and among the top in the nation.
Our roofers are trained and supported to do their best. Many have been with us for decades, and several families now have multiple generations working side by side.
Nearly a century later, Commercial Roofers Indianapolis is a commercial roofing operation names in commercial roofing, combining our process, innovation, and a people-first approach to deliver excellence on every job.
The business expands from residential to commercial roofing, establishing a strong reputation for quality and reliability across Pennsylvania.
The second generation brings the company’s expertise to Texas, officially founding Commercial Roofers Indianapolis and completing its first major project: the airport terminal at Indianapolis.
1990s
Commercial Roofers Indianapolis grows into a large-scale commercial contractor, delivering projects for warehouses, industrial facilities, and corporate developments across the region.
We are the only full service commercial roofing contractor that safely delivers a quality, on time roof by Commercial Roofers Indianapolis values driven employees, at a competitive price.
To is a commercial roofing operation commercial roofing company by combining documentation discipline with modern operational excellence and innovation in single-ply roofing and architectural metal systems.
Our investment in continuing education and dual certifications keeps our workforce at the top of their craft. That’s why clients trust Commercial Roofers Indianapolis for complex commercial builds, re-roofing, and maintenance projects, knowing the work will always be done right.
Castleton Square Mall, Greenwood Park Mall, Hamilton Town Center, and the Fashion Mall at Keystone each present large-footprint retail roofing challenges with tenant operations that cannot be interrupted and lease constraints that drive project timing.
Retail roofing in Indianapolis is driven by three constraints that are different from office or warehouse work: tenant operations run seven days a week with no acceptable shutdown window, retail lease language often prohibits construction activity during peak selling hours (holidays, weekends during Q4), and the roofing scope is frequently complicated by decades of in-place patching, multiple roof system generations, and deteriorated original drain systems. Castleton Square Mall, one of the largest enclosed malls in Indiana, has a roof area of over 1.2 million sq ft — a replacement project that runs in phases over multiple budget cycles, not a single-season project.
Greenwood Park Mall on the south side anchors a retail corridor that includes strip centers, power centers, and the Greenwood Common lifestyle center development along US-31. Hamilton Town Center in Noblesville is a newer open-air lifestyle format with a mix of big-box anchors, junior anchors, and inline tenants. The Fashion Mall at Keystone — Keystone at the Crossing's upscale anchor — is a Class A enclosed mall where roofing work competes for scheduling windows with Nordstrom, Williams-Sonoma, and other tenants who do not tolerate roof-related interior disruption.
We approach retail roofing projects with the landlord's asset management office as our primary counterpart — not a facilities manager at a single building. Regional retail landlords like Simon Property Group (Castleton Square, Fashion Mall) and Washington Prime Group (Greenwood Park) manage roof capital across large portfolios, and the documentation we produce at closeout — warranty certificates, zone diagrams, maintenance schedules — feeds into asset management systems, not a paper file on a single building.
Enclosed mall roofing is among the most complex large-footprint retail work in the Indianapolis market. Castleton Square's roof system is a patchwork of systems from multiple reroof cycles — original BUR on the oldest anchor department store pads, modified bitumen on the main mall sections replaced in the 1990s and early 2000s, and TPO on the most recent renovation areas. A condition assessment on an enclosed mall of this scale is a multi-day survey with moisture scanning to map insulation saturation, a drain-by-drain assessment, and a phased replacement recommendation keyed to the mall's lease calendar and capital budget.
The Fashion Mall at Keystone operates at a higher retail tier and has stricter tenant coordination requirements. Work windows are negotiated with the mall's property management team and cannot overlap with peak shopping seasons (November 1 through January 15 is typically a no-work period for major roof sections). We document these scheduling constraints in the project record and build the production plan around the available window — even if that means phasing work across two budget years.
Skylights are a common complication on both enclosed malls. Original skylight glazing and frame assemblies at Castleton Square and the Fashion Mall are aging systems that develop leaks independent of the roof membrane — but the symptoms are indistinguishable to the tenant inside the building. We identify skylight framing condition in our inspection reports and document it separately from the membrane assessment so the landlord can scope and bid the skylight work independently.
Open-air retail formats — Hamilton Town Center in Noblesville, Greenwood Common on US-31, and the strip center corridors along 86th Street, 96th Street, and Michigan Road — present a different production environment than enclosed malls. Access is simpler, lay-down area is generally available in parking fields remote from active tenant entrances, and production can run on weekend nights when foot traffic is lowest. The constraint in open-air retail is the anchor tenants: big-box retailers like Target, Meijer, Kroger, and Home Depot in a power center have their own facilities management requirements and will not accept dry-in delays that leave any section of their roof open overnight.
Hamilton Town Center in Noblesville opened in 2008 and is in its first major roof maintenance cycle. The mix of single-story tenant space with varying roof heights and parapet configurations means each building section requires its own scope review. We inspect Hamilton Town Center buildings as a coordinated portfolio rather than individual properties — identifying which sections are in active replacement territory, which need maintenance contract attention, and which are in acceptable condition for the next 5 to 8 years.
Strip centers along the 86th Street and Castleton corridors are a mixed-vintage market — buildings from the late 1980s through 2010s sharing the same retail cluster, each with different ownership, different roof system generations, and different maintenance histories. Our inspection work on individual strip center buildings always includes a documented comparison of the building's roof age against the surrounding comparable inventory, so the owner has context for capital timing decisions.
Our project managers will work around your tenant operations and lease calendar to deliver a scope and production plan that does not disrupt your retail operations.
Tell us about the building and the roof problem. We'll document it and put a plan in writing — with an honest repair-vs-replace recommendation and no upsell pressure.
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