Warwick Township, Bucks County, PA

Roofing, Siding & Windows in Warwick Township, PA
— Quoted in 15 Minutes.

Warwick was founded by petition on February 13, 1733, named for a small town in central England, and gave up land when Doylestown Township was carved out before 1819. The township calls itself the Heart of Bucks County and keeps over 1,100 acres permanently preserved, so suburban homes here often back straight onto open ground. Whether your house is an older rural build or a newer subdivision home, we read the roof, walls and lot off aerial imagery and a 3D model — noting whether the parcel runs to preserved open land or to a built neighbor — and present the written quote on a single Zoom call.

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About Warwick Township, PA

Petitioned in 1733,
the Heart of Bucks County.

14,8432025 Est. Population
1733Founded by Petition
1,100+ acPermanently Preserved

By Warwick's own history the township was founded by petition on February 13, 1733, and named after a small town in central England; before 1819 its boundaries ran wider and were trimmed when Doylestown Township was established. As of the 2020 census this 11.1 square-mile township held 14,851 residents — an increase of 414 since 2010 — and the Census Bureau's subcounty series puts it at 14,843 by 2025. Warwick is a Township of the second class, run by three elected supervisors on staggered six-year terms, and its own page describes the community as mostly suburban, mixed with commercial, industrial and rural areas. With over 1,100 acres permanently preserved by the township and more held by Bucks County or the Heritage Conservancy, a great many lots sit against open land — which is exactly the kind of detail that decides how an exterior is scoped.

What Shapes Exterior Work in Warwick

Suburban Stock Against Preserved Land.

Warwick is an 11.1 square-mile inland township the supervisors themselves call mostly suburban with commercial, industrial and rural pockets, and it has locked over 1,100 acres into permanent preservation. Two variables account for most of what shapes an exterior job here:

  • Rural-crossroads stock beside subdivision builds: an older farmstead or crossroads house predating Warwick's 1733 founding-petition era sits on a framing system and roof geometry unlike the adjacent subdivision build — which yours is comes straight off the aerial before the first number is written.
  • Preserved-land edges: with 1,100+ acres preserved by the township and more by the county or the Heritage Conservancy, many lots back onto open ground with longer wind and weather exposure lines that we factor into roofing and siding spec.
  • Trimmed-boundary geography: Warwick gave land to Doylestown Township before 1819, so its older fabric does not run in a single grid — we work off your actual parcel rather than a township-wide assumption.
  • Age-dependent wear: the humid-continental freeze-thaw cycle and summer storm load arrive identically at a 1733-era rural roof and a 1990s subdivision roof, but original material choices, pitch angle and attic depth each absorb that weather on a different timeline — so underlayment, flashing and venting are specified to the real house age, not a Warwick-wide average.

Warwick's two deciding variables — which of its three eras a house belongs to, and whether the lot runs against preserved open land or a subdivision neighbor — are both visible from the aerial before a single spec decision is made.

Where We Work in & Around Warwick

18929 to 18976 in Central Bucks.

Warwick Township spans 11.1 square miles from the Jamison township building at 1733 Township Greene (ZIP 18929) out through the 18974 and 18976 postal areas. The township holds a seat in the Central Bucks School District — the same district that also includes Chalfont, Doylestown and New Britain boroughs alongside Buckingham, Doylestown, New Britain, Plumstead and Warrington townships. We quote and install across all three Warwick ZIP sections and pull the permit through Planning and Zoning at 1733 Township Greene:

18929 18974 18976 Doylestown Township Warrington Township Buckingham Township New Britain Township

Whether the address is in the Jamison 18929 section near 1733 Township Greene, the 18974 corridor, or the 18976 section, the aerial measurement and 3D model are built first — then the Planning and Zoning permit application is filed at the Township Building on Township Greene before a crew is ever dispatched. The same process covers all of Bucks County.

Services in Warwick Township, PA

Exterior Work Across the Heart of Bucks County.

Same craftsmen, same materials, same warranties as any in-home contractor — without the in-home sales pitch.

Roofing in Warwick

Warwick lists reroofing among the structural changes that require a building permit. We pull your actual roof off the aerial, place it as older rural stock or a newer subdivision build, spec the tear-off, decking and venting to that house, and submit the application to the Township Building before any work starts.

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Siding in Warwick

A cladding profile that suits a subdivision elevation rarely suits an older rural house, and vice versa. We render the material and color on your real walls in 3D and add weather margin where a lot backs onto Warwick's 1,100-plus preserved acres and the longer exposure that open land brings.

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Windows & Doors in Warwick

The township even permits window enlargements, so opening changes here are scoped, not casual. We measure every opening off your facade and the aerial, render energy-efficient options on the real 3D model, and flag anything that turns into a permitted enlargement before it is ordered.

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Fences in Warwick

Warwick specifically requires a building permit for fences that enclose a pool, and the application goes in person to the Township Building at 1733 Township Greene. A lot running against one of Warwick's 1,100-plus permanently preserved acres carries a very different property-line geometry than a tight subdivision parcel, so we trace your actual parcel from the aerial first — confirming what your back boundary abuts — before any layout is drawn, render the run in 3D, then file with Planning and Zoning at Township Greene and arrange the utility marking.

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Why Warwick Township Homeowners Choose D'Bros

Built for a Suburban Township With Open Edges.

We Read the Lot, Not Just the House

Warwick keeps over 1,100 acres permanently preserved by the township alone — plus additional county and Heritage Conservancy parcels — so a subdivision home here may back straight onto open ground that delivers longer wind and weather exposure than a tightly neighbor-bounded lot. We pull each parcel from the aerial, confirm what the boundary actually abuts, and weight the roofing, siding and opening selections to the exposure that specific lot carries.

One Permit Office: 1733 Township Greene

The Planning and Zoning Department in Jamison, reachable at (215) 343-6100, requires building permits for reroofing, decks, pool fences and more, submitted in-person to the Township Building. We complete that application, line up the inspections, and keep the process off your plate.

A Township Drawn by Petition

Warwick has existed as a drawn boundary since a petition dated February 13, 1733, redrawn again when Doylestown split off before 1819 — proof this place has always been understood on paper before anyone walked it. Modern aerial imagery and a 3D model are the same idea, sharper: send the Warwick address, the plan is finished before the Zoom, and the only crew that reaches the property is the install team.

Warwick Township FAQ

Questions Warwick Homeowners Ask.

My Warwick lot backs onto preserved open land — does that change the work?
It can. Warwick has over 1,100 acres permanently preserved by the township, plus more held by Bucks County or the Heritage Conservancy, so a lot of homes back onto open ground with longer wind and weather exposure. We account for that exposure in roofing and siding spec rather than treating every Warwick house the same.
Warwick's Planning and Zoning office is in Jamison — what does it permit and how does the process work?
The Planning and Zoning Department at 1733 Township Greene, Jamison, PA 18929 — phone (215) 343-6100 — requires building permits for all structural exterior changes, with reroofing, decks, pools and fences enclosing a pool named specifically. Applications are submitted in-person to the Township Building (select projects are available through the online permitting system), and we handle the filing and inspections for you.
Three ZIPs appear for Warwick — 18929, 18974 and 18976 — why?
Warwick Township's 11.1 square miles spans three postal areas: 18929 is the Jamison ZIP where the township building sits at 1733 Township Greene, and 18974 and 18976 cover the rest of the township's sections across that acreage. All three addresses share the same school district — Central Bucks — and the same permit office at 1733 Township Greene. We pull the permit through Planning and Zoning there regardless of which ZIP section your property falls in.
What does the February 13, 1733 petition tell us about Warwick Township's age and boundaries?
That specific date — recorded in Warwick's own history — marks the day the petition was filed naming the township after a small town in central England. The boundary it drew was later redrawn when Doylestown Township was carved out before 1819, so Warwick's pre-1819 footprint was larger than the 11.1 square miles it covers today. Buildings predating that boundary adjustment sit on a different parcel fabric than the newer subdivisions, which is why we scope every Warwick job off the actual parcel rather than a township-wide average.
A Warwick lot that backs onto 1,100+ preserved acres is harder to scope — how do you handle it?
The preserved boundary is visible in the aerial. We pull the parcel, see exactly what the lot abuts — whether it is one of the 1,100-plus permanently preserved township acres, Bucks County open land or the Heritage Conservancy parcels — and weight the roofing and siding spec to account for the longer wind and weather exposure that open back lots carry. All of that is settled from the 3D model before the Zoom; no doorstep visit is needed to read a lot line or a roofline from above. The permit application to the Planning and Zoning Department at 1733 Township Greene follows the Zoom, and the install crew is the only team that actually drives to the property.
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15-Min Quote in Warwick —
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Fill out the form. Within 4 hours we'll text you to schedule your 15-min Zoom. We'll have a 3D visual plan of your Warwick home built before we get on the call.

  • 3D visual planning of your actual Warwick home, walked through together
  • Written quote in your inbox before the call ends
  • 100% financing available if you need it
  • Licensed & insured · NJ HIC Reg. #13VH10025100 · address used only for aerial measurement

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Warwick Homeowner? See the Design Before You Commit.