Metal Roofing in Rutland County, Vermont
Rutland County is Vermont’s second most populous, 60,572 residents at the 2020 census, and its stone country: the marble belt built Rutland and Proctor, and the slate valley along the New York line roofed half the Northeast. That heritage means the county knows roofs, and its aging housing stock keeps the replacement question alive on every block. We connect Rutland County homeowners with independent local contractors for free written metal roofing quotes.
50 psf
The adopted ground snow load for Rutland and its valley neighbors on the Vermont ground snow load map, the figure a roof here is engineered against. Statewide, Vermont code also sets a floor: no roof may be designed for a total snow load under 40 psf.
Source: VT Division of Fire Safety snow load map 40 psf minimum: Vermont amendments to IBC Ch. 16
Confirm the value for a specific address with the Division of Fire Safety map before any design work; brackets change at town lines and sites above 2,500 feet need a site-specific analysis.
The region's roof engineering picture
The Vermont ground snow load map lists the county’s valley towns, Rutland City, Rutland Town, Brandon, and Clarendon among them, at 50 psf. Brackets climb toward Killington and the Green Mountain spine on the county’s east side, so mountain-road addresses need a map check rather than an assumption. Source: VT Division of Fire Safety snow load map
Published climate summaries put Rutland’s seasonal snowfall around 75 inches, a middle path between Champlain Valley and Northeast Kingdom totals, with the freeze-thaw cycling that loads shingle eaves with ice. It is a classic profile for standing seam conversions paired with attic air sealing. Source: BestPlaces climate data
Housing stock and roof vernacular
Rutland City’s housing is among the oldest in America by NeighborhoodScout’s Census-based measure, with just over half of homes built before 1939, and the county’s villages share the pattern. Old stock is the county’s roofing story: steep pitches built for slate and metal, decking that has carried many roofs, and framing sized for heavy loads. Source: NeighborhoodScout (Census data)
The slate valley on the county’s western edge, centered on Fair Haven and Poultney, supplied roofing slate to the nation from the 1840s onward, a history documented by the Vermont Geological Survey. Slate-roofed homes here deserve a repair-first assessment before any metal conversation, per federal preservation guidance. Source: Vermont Geological Survey on slate
Towns we cover here
Middlebury sits just north in Addison County; its page lives here as the nearest covered region. Requests from Brandon, Castleton, Fair Haven, Poultney, and the rest of the county route to the same contractors.