Carport & Cover Install in Orange Grove, TX
Inland South Texas climate.
For carport & cover install, the service area covers roughly 40 miles from central Orange Grove.
Common reasons to call
- A vehicle sits out in the sun and the owner wants shade to protect the paint and interior
- Hail and heavy coastal storms have damaged a car or truck left in the open
- An owner wants a covered spot for an RV, boat, trailer, or farm equipment
- A homeowner wants a carport added next to the house or garage for a second vehicle
- An old wood or metal cover has rusted, leaned, or been torn up by wind and needs replacing
- A business or ranch needs covered parking or a covered work area for crews and gear
Typical work
- Set a freestanding metal carport on a new or existing concrete slab or ground anchors
- Attach a cover to the side of a house or existing garage so it drains away from the wall
- Build a taller cover sized for an RV, boat, or tractor with open or partly closed sides
- Pour a level concrete pad first, then anchor and raise the carport frame and roof
- Remove and haul off a damaged or leaning old cover and put a new one in its place
- Add closed sides, end walls, or gable trim to turn an open carport into a more enclosed shelter
Typical turnaround
A simple freestanding cover on ready ground can go up in one to two days. When a permit, a new concrete slab, or windstorm certification is needed, plan on a few weeks from the first quote to a finished, signed-off structure, since the concrete has to cure and the paperwork takes time.
Materials and equipment
- Galvanized or painted steel tubing and roof panels
- Aluminum framing and panels for lighter covers
- Anchor bolts, mobile-home anchors, or ground rebar anchors
- Concrete for the slab or footings
- Metal roofing panels, screws with sealing washers, and trim
- Bracing, purlins, and hardware rated for local wind loads
- Wood posts and beams on some traditional patio-style covers
Job sizes
Minor
A small single-vehicle open metal carport set on ground anchors on already flat ground, or minor repair like re-anchoring or swapping a few damaged panels
Standard
A one to two vehicle carport with a new or existing slab, wind bracing, and permit paperwork, or attaching a cover to the side of a house
Major
A tall RV or boat cover, a wide multi-bay cover, or an engineered coastal build with a fresh poured slab, closed sides, and windstorm certification
Replacement
Tearing down and hauling off a rusted, leaning, or storm-damaged cover and installing a new engineered structure in its place
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓A good pro checks your local permit rules before starting and pulls a permit when one is needed
- ✓In coastal counties they build to windstorm rules and can arrange the engineered drawings and certificate that insurers may want
- ✓They size the anchoring and bracing to real wind loads instead of just setting posts in loose dirt
- ✓They make sure an attached cover slopes and flashes so water drains away from your house wall
- ✓They carry liability insurance and can show proof before work begins
- ✓They give a clear written quote that spells out the slab, the frame, the roof panels, and the warranty
- ✓They measure your vehicle height and parking space so the finished cover actually fits with room to spare
General liability insurance, workers compensation, engineered wind-load stamped drawings, and windstorm (WPI-8) certification signed off by a licensed engineer for structures in the coastal windstorm zone; any electrical for lights or outlets should be done by a licensed electrician
Common questions
Do I need a permit for a carport in the Coastal Bend?
Often yes for a permanent structure, but it depends on your city or county and how big and how attached the cover is. A good pro checks your local building office before starting and pulls the permit if one is needed. Ask them to confirm this in writing.
Will it hold up to hurricane and coastal winds?
That comes down to how it is engineered and anchored. In the coastal windstorm zone, structures usually need engineered drawings and a windstorm certificate signed by a licensed engineer. Ask your pro how the cover is rated for wind and how it will be anchored.
What is a WPI-8 windstorm certificate and do I need one?
It is a certificate through the Texas Department of Insurance that shows a structure in a coastal catastrophe area was built to windstorm code. It can matter for insurance. Ask your pro and your insurance agent whether your build needs one.
Do I need a concrete slab, or can it sit on the ground?
Both are done. A slab gives a clean, dry surface and strong anchoring, while ground anchors cost less and work on level dirt or gravel. A pro can tell you what your ground and your wind rules call for.
Can a carport be attached to my house?
Yes, many are. The key is flashing and slope so water drains away from your wall and roof instead of into them. Attached covers are also more likely to need a permit and engineered anchoring.
Metal or wood, which should I pick?
Metal is common on the coast because it stands up to sun, bugs, and rot and needs little upkeep. Wood can look softer and more traditional but needs sealing and more care in the salt air. Ask your pro about the tradeoffs for your spot.
How tall can I go for an RV or boat?
Covers are built in a range of heights, and taller RV or boat covers are common. Measure your tallest vehicle with any vents or antennas and share that number so the frame is sized right with room to spare.
What should I ask a carport pro before hiring?
Ask if they pull the permit, whether they carry liability insurance, how the cover is rated and anchored for wind, whether it comes with engineered drawings, and what warranty covers the frame and the roof panels.