By Corey Philip // Aug 15, 2023

This week, we completed an enclosure restoration project for a client in Cape Coral. After Ms. McNally noticed that her pool cage started to look like an eyesore, she hired us to make it look brand new again.

Check out what her old pool enclosure looked like. It had rusty fasteners and the paint was fading. For her project, she availed our Lifetime Restoration Package which includes rescreening, repainting, and replacing the fasteners with durable materials and subsequently longer warranty.

We head on to her home and the first thing we did was cover the entire deck and pool to prevent getting debris or paint drops on it. Next, we removed the screens so that we can easily replace the fasteners and repaint the entire structure. For the fasteners, we used Blue-tap Nylotech and Stainless Pro-Tect Tapcons, which come with a 10-year warranty.

After, we repainted the entire aluminum structure with white Sherwin Williams Hi-Solids Polyurethane that was sprayed on electrostatically. Lastly, we installed Superscreen 14/16, which is a mesh that can be installed on large openings while being able to withstand strong wind pressure without tearing. It’s three times stronger than the standard screen so our client won’t need an upgrade for a long time.

Our efficient crew completed this project in less than a week. Ms. McNally is glad that she won’t have to look at the rusty fasteners and faded structure anymore.

Ref. No. 21795

Corey Philip

About the author

Corey began working on screen enclosures as a teenager in 2004 after hurricane Charley devastated his home town of Punta Gorda. 7 years later, after holding positions from foreman, to sales, to project manager, while attending college at Florida Gulf Coast University, Corey and childhood friend Thomas Davis founded Gulf Coast Aluminum in 2011. With a focus on delivering an unparrelled level of service, the company has grown by leaps and bounds under their leadership. Today you’ll find Corey answering the phones In his free time Corey likes training for triathlons, running the trails at Ding Darling park on Sanibel Island, and of course, working on growing Gulf Coast Aluminum.