Local Experts Serving Rhode Island

Siding Contractor in Rhode Island

Siding in Rhode Island fails faster than it should. Not because the products are bad, but because most installations do not account for what Rhode Island weather actually does to exterior surfaces over time. Salt air, humidity cycling, hard winters, and the particular way moisture moves through New England building assemblies all affect how long a siding installation lasts and how it performs between now and the day it needs replacing.

Cornerstone Decks & Siding installs and repairs siding across Rhode Island with a specific focus on the climate and building stock of the Ocean State. We work primarily with James Hardie fiber cement and LP SmartSide engineered wood, two products that handle Rhode Island conditions better than the vinyl and wood alternatives they replace. Here is what we have learned from doing this work across Kent County, Providence County, and Washington County for over a decade.

BUILDING DECKS ACROSS RHODE ISLAND — WHAT CHANGES BY REGION

The most common call we get is from a homeowner whose siding is failing earlier than it should. The paint is peeling. The panels are buckling. There is rot at the bottom courses. The caulk joints have opened up and water is getting behind the surface. These are not random failures; they follow predictable patterns based on where the house sits, how the original installation was done, and what material was used.

Coastal and waterfront properties

Properties within a few miles of Narragansett Bay experience relative humidity levels that are consistently higher than inland Rhode Island, particularly in the mornings and in late fall when fog sits over the water for hours. This sustained high humidity does two things to siding. It accelerates the cycling of moisture into and out of materials that absorb water, which causes paint adhesion failures in wood siding and surface deterioration in lower-grade vinyl. It also keeps the wall assembly behind the siding wetter for longer, which is where the real damage happens: rot in the sheathing, not just in the siding itself.

The solution is not just a better siding product. It is also a better installation. Proper housewrap lapping and sealing at penetrations, back-priming of all fiber cement cut ends before installation, and designed drainage gaps at the bottom courses that allow any water that gets behind the siding to exit rather than sit. We treat every installation as a water management system, not just a cosmetic replacement.

The freeze-thaw problem for inland properties

Island Rhode Island, including Coventry, Johnston, Scituate, and the hills west of Providence, sees more freeze-thaw cycles per winter than coastal areas. For vinyl siding specifically, repeated thermal contraction at sub-zero temperatures causes brittleness and cracking at the nail hem. We see this most often on north-facing walls that never get enough sun to warm up during cold snaps. For these properties, we recommend fiber cement or engineered wood over vinyl because neither material becomes brittle in cold temperatures.

The old house problem

A significant portion of Rhode Island’s housing stock is pre-1960 construction, including Cape Cods, Colonials, and triple-deckers with original wood clapboard siding that has been painted over so many times the layers are physically separating from the substrate. When we strip this siding, we frequently find issues behind it that the homeowner had no idea existed, such as sheathing rot, missing or deteriorated housewrap, and occasionally balloon frame construction with no fire blocking that also needs to be addressed before new siding goes on. We document everything we find and give the homeowner a complete picture before any additional work begins.

PREMIUM SIDING MATERIALS

SiDING MATERIALS WE INSTALL IN RHODE ISLAND

James Hardie fiber cement siding

James Hardie is our most recommended product for Rhode Island homeowners who want a long-term solution with minimal maintenance. Fiber cement does not rot, does not warp, does not become brittle in cold temperatures, and is not affected by salt air, which makes it the logical choice for coastal properties where wood and vinyl both underperform.

The Hardie product we specify most often is HardiePlank lap siding in the HardieZone HZ10 formulation, which is engineered specifically for cold and wet climates like Rhode Island. The HZ10 formulation uses a denser fiber cement mix with a factory-applied primer that bonds more aggressively to the substrate than standard Hardie products. We are James Hardie certified installers, which means we follow their installation requirements exactly, including back-priming all cut ends, maintaining proper clearances from grade and roofing, and using the specific fastener types and penetration depths their warranty requires.

For homeowners replacing wood clapboard on older homes in East Greenwich, Providence, or Bristol, Hardie’s Architectural Collection of smooth and beaded profiles matches the look of original wood siding closely enough to satisfy most historic district commissions while delivering fiber cement’s performance advantages.

Engineered wood shakes and shingles

For Cape Cod style homes, which are extraordinarily common across Rhode Island, LP SmartSide shingles and cedar-look shakes provide the aesthetic that homeowners want without the maintenance that real cedar demands. Cedar shingles on a north-facing Cape Cod elevation in Rhode Island typically need replacement within 15 to 20 years. SmartSide shingles carry a 50-year warranty against rot and fungal decay.

LP SmartSide engineered wood siding

LP SmartSide is our recommendation when a homeowner wants the look and workability of wood siding without wood’s maintenance requirements. It is manufactured from wood strands bonded with an exterior-grade resin and wrapped in a zinc-borate treated overlay. The zinc borate is a fungicide that prevents the rot and insect damage that makes conventional wood siding a liability in Rhode Island’s wet climate.

SmartSide machines like wood. It cuts cleanly, takes paint well, and accepts traditional trim profiles, which makes it the right choice for historic properties where Hardie’s weight and thickness create installation challenges on original framing that was not designed for fiber cement. It is also meaningfully lighter than Hardie, which matters on older homes where we need to be careful about adding load to walls that were not built to modern structural standards.

Vinyl siding

We install vinyl siding and believe it is the right choice in specific situations, primarily when budget is the primary constraint and the property is inland, away from the coastal humidity and salt air that accelerate vinyl’s degradation. We specify a minimum thickness of .046 inches for all vinyl installations. Thinner profiles are more susceptible to the brittleness failures we see in cold Rhode Island winters.

What we will not do is install vinyl siding on a coastal property and tell a homeowner it will perform like fiber cement. It will not. The fade rate is higher, the surface becomes chalky faster, and the mechanical properties degrade more quickly in sustained coastal humidity. We have those conversations honestly at the estimate stage.

OUR INSTALLATION PROCESS

OUR SIDING INSTALLATION PROCESS IN RHODE ISLAND

1

Free estimate and wall assessment

Every siding estimate includes a visual assessment of the existing wall assembly. We look at the bottom courses where water damage typically starts first, the condition of the trim and window flashing, and any areas where the current siding is showing signs of moisture infiltration. You receive a written quote that separates the siding work from any remediation work we find behind it, so you know exactly what you are paying for.
2

Material selection

We bring physical samples of Hardie and SmartSide profiles to your home so you can see how different textures and colors read on your specific exterior in your actual light conditions. Color selection on siding is one of the decisions homeowners most commonly wish they had spent more time on. A sample board in a showroom looks completely different on a north-facing gray-sky Rhode Island afternoon.
3

Permits

Most full siding replacements in Rhode Island require a building permit. We handle the application with your municipality and schedule the required inspections. Some towns require a mid-installation inspection before the wall is closed. We coordinate these without interrupting the project schedule.
4

Removal and wall inspection

We remove the existing siding carefully and document the condition of everything behind it before new material goes on. If we find sheathing rot, failed housewrap, or other issues, we stop, show you what we found, and give you options before proceeding

5

Installation

We install new housewrap where needed, back-prime all cut ends on fiber cement installations, and follow manufacturer installation specifications exactly, not approximately. The specific fastener type, penetration depth, and clearance requirements are not suggestions. They are what the warranty is conditional on.
6

Trim, caulking, and paint

All trim is replaced or repainted as part of the project. Caulk joints are tooled properly, not just pushed in, and we use only paintable elastomeric caulk that moves with the siding through thermal cycles without cracking open. On Hardie installations, we apply two coats of 100% acrylic exterior paint over the factory primer.
7

Final walkthrough

We walk the completed installation with you and document it with photos. We go over the maintenance schedule, including what to wash it with, how often, and what to watch for, and answer any questions about warranty coverage.

REALISTIC RHODE ISLAND PRICING

SIDING REPAIR ACROSS Rhode Island

Not every siding project is a full replacement. We do a significant amount of repair work, including replacing damaged sections, re-flashing windows and doors where the original installation has failed, addressing rot at the bottom courses, and re-caulking joints that have opened up. The most common repair calls we get across Rhode Island include:

01

Bottom course rot

The most frequent problem we see on wood and older fiber cement installations. Water splashes back from the grade onto the lowest siding course, sits there, and works its way into the end grain. The fix is replacing the affected boards and installing a proper drip edge and clearance gap so water can exit, not just replacing the boards and recreating the same condition.

02

Window and door flashing failures

Cause water infiltration that typically shows up as interior wall staining or peeling paint on the inside of the exterior wall. The flashing itself is usually fine. The problem is the integration between the flashing and the housewrap, which in many Rhode Island homes from the 1980s and 1990s was never properly detailed. We re-flash these openings from scratch.

03

Vinyl siding blow-off

Common after the coastal storms that move through Rhode Island in fall and winter. We stock common profile widths and can typically match existing vinyl within a few days of the damage occurring.

04

Fiber cement cracking

At butt joints and around penetrations, water intrusion is usually a caulking failure rather than a product failure. Properly tooled elastomeric caulk should last 10 to 15 years. The cracked, shrunken caulk we see on most properties was either the wrong product or was installed incorrectly. Re-caulking is a straightforward repair that prevents the water infiltration that leads to much more expensive problems.

Siding and Historic Homes in Rhode Island

Rhode Island has more buildings on the National Register of Historic Places per square mile than almost any other state. Providence’s College Hill, East Greenwich’s historic district, and Bristol’s Hope Street corridor all contain residential properties where exterior changes, including siding replacement, require historic district commission approval.

We have worked on properties in each of these districts and understand what these commissions will and will not approve. The consistent principle is that new materials should match the scale, texture, and visual weight of the original, not necessarily be identical in composition. Most commissions will approve fiber cement or engineered wood in profiles that match original clapboard dimensions. What they typically will not approve is vinyl siding on a contributing structure, regardless of profile, because the surface texture and sheen are visibly different from wood.

For properties in historic districts, we prepare the documentation the commission requires, including photos of the existing condition, material specifications, and profile drawings, and attend the commission meeting if needed. This process adds time, but it produces approvals rather than denial letters.

Siding Contractor Rhode Island FAQs

Does siding replacement require a permit in Rhode Island?
In most Rhode Island municipalities yes — a full siding replacement requires a building permit. Some towns exempt re-siding projects that do not alter the wall assembly, but we verify with your specific municipality before starting. We handle all permit applications.
James Hardie fiber cement carries a 30-year non-prorated warranty and in Rhode Island’s climate realistically lasts 40 to 50 years with proper painting maintenance. LP SmartSide carries a 50-year warranty against rot and fungal decay. Quality vinyl in an inland location typically performs well for 20 to 30 years. Coastal vinyl degrades faster — 15 to 20 years is more realistic.
Technically yes in most cases but we recommend against it. Installing new siding over old traps the moisture that is usually already present in the wall assembly, accelerates deterioration of the substrate behind it, adds weight to the wall framing, and eliminates the opportunity to inspect and repair what is behind the siding before it becomes a structural problem. It also voids most manufacturer warranties.
If damage is limited to one or two elevations and the underlying sheathing is sound, repair is often the right answer. If the siding is failing consistently across multiple elevations, if there is widespread paint adhesion failure, or if we find sheathing damage when we probe the bottom courses, replacement is usually more cost-effective over a 10-year horizon than ongoing repairs.
James Hardie fiber cement in the HZ10 formulation is our consistent recommendation for coastal properties. It is unaffected by salt air, does not become brittle in cold temperatures, and carries one of the strongest warranties in the industry. For properties immediately on the water where aesthetics allow it, fiber cement shingles or shakes also perform extremely well.
A full siding replacement on a 2,000 square foot home typically takes 5 to 8 days. Larger homes, properties with complex trim details, or projects where we find significant repair work behind the existing siding can take longer. We give you a realistic timeline at the estimate stage — not the shortest number that sounds good.

LOCAL RHODE ISLAND SERVICE AREAS

Rhode Island Communities We Serve

We build decks across Kent County, Providence County, and Washington County including East Greenwich, Warwick, Cranston, Providence, North Kingstown, South Kingstown, Barrington, Bristol, Coventry, Johnston, and surrounding communities.
We understand the permitting requirements, zoning conditions, and climate considerations unique to each Rhode Island municipality we work in.

Get a Free Siding Estimate in DECK PROJECT

If your siding is showing its age, or if you just want an honest assessment of where it stands, we are happy to come out and take a look at no charge and no obligation. We will tell you what we see, what we recommend, and what it will cost with a written quote that breaks down every line item.