Builders America

Facebook | Thursday, July 23, 2026

35-Plus Years and 1,200-Plus Projects: What Experience Teaches About Building for Georgia's Climate

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Every region has its own way of testing an outdoor structure. In North Georgia, it's the freeze-thaw cycles that crack poorly set footings, the humidity that finds every gap in a poorly flashed roofline, and the summer downpours that expose bad drainage within the first season.

Over 35 years and more than 1,200 completed projects, we've learned exactly where those failure points tend to show up, and we build to avoid them before they happen rather than fixing them after a homeowner calls with a problem. That knowledge doesn't show up in a brochure, it shows up ten years later when a deck or sunroom is still performing the way it did on day one.

Experience like that isn't something a newer company can shortcut, no matter how good their marketing looks.

What's the oldest outdoor structure on your property, and how has it held up?

#BuildersAmericaExperience


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Photo of a completed project that has aged well, ideally with some visible weathering that shows it holding up over years. No Google Drive folder is set up for this client yet; source from the portfolio at buildersamerica.com/portfolio or request recent job photos.

Canva text suggestion: "35+ Years, 1,200+ Projects" or "Built to Last in Georgia's Climate"


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