Commercial roofing for aerospace and defense facilities in Fargo, ND operates under a different set of constraints than standard commercial work. Facilities tied to active weapons programs, aircraft production, national laboratories, or military installations carry access control requirements, security clearance protocols for onsite supervisors, and coordination with facility security officers before a single material lift is scheduled. The roof plan should account for requirement — and we build it into every bid, schedule, and site plan.
Major Aerospace and Defense Facilities in the Fargo Area
- Minot Air Force Base (Air Force Strategic Installation) — One of only two Air Force bases operating both B-52 bombers and Minuteman III ICBMs, home to the 5th Bomb Wing and 91st Missile Wing — over 150 missiles in underground launch facilities across the surrounding plains
- Grand Forks Air Force Base (Air Force Intelligence Installation) — Home of E-8 JSTARS and RQ-4 Global Hawk intelligence/surveillance operations, with extensive mission support facility infrastructure
North Dakota's Air Force installations — particularly Minot AFB's bomber and ICBM infrastructure — require roofing systems designed for extreme subarctic conditions (-40°F design temperatures, heavy snow loads) across a diverse inventory from alert facilities to missile maintenance structures.
The roofing systems on aerospace and defense structures carry stakes beyond weather protection. A failure over an active manufacturing floor — whether that means a fighter jet assembly line, a missile guidance lab, or a satellite integration cleanroom — can trigger production shutdowns, contaminate precision components, or compromise facility certifications. The zero-tolerance standard these clients apply to their primary mission is the same standard we apply to the roof above it.
Our defense and aerospace roofing work includes planned replacement, emergency roof repair under time-critical operational constraints, and new construction roofing for facility expansions. We carry the insurance coverage, bonding capacity, and documented quality procedures that federal facility managers and prime contractor subcontract teams require. When a facility expansion schedule is tied to a DOD delivery milestone, "we'll get to it" is not a close-out answer — we staff to the schedule and document every phase.
Aerospace & Defense Roofing Questions
Can your crews work on federal installations or DoD facilities?
Yes. We work with facility security officers to complete the necessary base access credentialing for our crew members. Lead time for clearance varies by installation — we factor it into the project schedule upfront rather than discovering it during mobilization.
What documentation do you provide for defense or government facility work?
We provide full prevailing wage certified payroll (if applicable), material submittals for spec compliance, daily logs, third-party inspection coordination, LEED or sustainability documentation if required, and a final warranty package formatted for federal facility records systems.
How do you handle active operations during a roofing project on a facility that can't shut down?
We develop a phased work plan with the facility manager and base operations officer — sectioning the roof into work zones, maintaining dry-in protection on any open sections, and scheduling loud or disruptive work during approved windows. Our pre-construction checklist includes noise, vibration, dust, and chemical exposure considerations for every zone adjacent to active operations.
Do you work on classified facilities?
We work on the building envelope — roofs, walls, and flashings — which in most cases does not require classified access. For facilities where roof access itself requires a clearance, we identify that requirement early and work with the government contracting officer to plan accordingly.
What roof systems are best suited for defense manufacturing and laboratory environments?
TPO and PVC membrane systems are most common for new and re-roofing work due to their resistance to chemical splash and UV degradation. Standing seam metal is preferred on high-bay structures where long-term performance and minimal maintenance are prioritized. We always match the system to the specific exposure — a satellite integration cleanroom has different requirements than a motor pool.
