
SDVOSB · Commercial & Government Roofing · Amarillo, TX
Commercial roofing engineered for the Panhandle.
Centennial Shield is a service-disabled veteran-owned commercial roofing contractor. TPO, EPDM, PVC, modified bitumen, metal, and coatings — for government, industrial, and multifamily facilities within 200 miles of Amarillo.
- Certification
- SDVOSB
- Primary NAICS
- 238160
- Manufacturer Certified
- Mule-Hide TPO · EPDM · PVC
- Service Radius
- Amarillo, TX + 200 mi
01 / Systems
Six commercial roofing systems.
One standard of installation.
01
TPO Roofing
Heat-welded single-ply with the reflectivity high-plains UV demands. Our most-specified membrane.
Spec the system02
EPDM Roofing
Proven rubber membrane with decades of cold-weather performance — built for freeze-thaw country.
Spec the system03
PVC Roofing
Chemical- and grease-resistant single-ply for restaurants, processing plants, and industrial roofs.
Spec the system04
Modified Bitumen Roofing
Multi-ply redundancy that shrugs off hail. The workhorse for buildings that can't afford leaks.
Spec the system05
Metal Roofing
Standing-seam systems engineered for 100+ mph design wind speeds and decades of service.
Spec the system06
Roof Coatings
Restore a sound roof for a fraction of replacement cost — silicone and acrylic systems.
Spec the system02 / Environment
The hardest roofing climate in Texas. We spec for it.
Amarillo sits at roughly 3,600 feet in the heart of Hail Alley, and NWS records rank it among the windiest cities in the country. The May 2013 hailstorm alone produced insured losses in the hundreds of millions across the metro. Design wind speeds here run 110 to 125 mph under ASCE 7 — numbers most flat-roof specs written for Dallas or Houston never contemplate.
That is why every Centennial Shield proposal speaks in FM uplift ratings, hail classifications, and attachment schedules — not just square footage. High-elevation UV, dozens of freeze-thaw cycles a winter, and 70+ mph gust events are the baseline here, so we engineer the assembly for them: cover boards under membranes in hail corridors, enhanced perimeter fastening, and seam systems that survive thermal cycling.
- ASCE 7 design wind speeds, regional high
- 125 mph
- Elevation — high-UV membrane exposure
- 3600 ft
- Service radius from Amarillo
- 200 mi
- Commercial systems installed & maintained
- 6
Federal · State · Municipal
A bid-ready SDVOSB roofing contractor for government work.
Centennial Shield is a certified Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business. Federal agencies carry an SDVOSB contracting goal, and prime contractors need qualified SDVOSB subcontractors to meet their small-business subcontracting plans — on roofing scopes, that pool is thin. In the Texas Panhandle, it barely exists.
From re-roofs on municipal buildings to maintenance contracts on federal facilities, we bring commercial roofing competency wrapped in the documentation procurement actually requires: a current capability statement, manufacturer certifications, and specs written to code.
- Set-Aside Status
- SDVOSB
- Primary NAICS
- 238160
- Sectors
- Federal · State · Municipal
- Capability Statement
- Available on request
03 / Services
From first deck to final inspection — and every storm in between.
04 / Coverage
Based in Amarillo. Mobilized across the High Plains.
Commercial and government roofing from the Oklahoma border to the South Plains — refineries in Borger, processing plants in Dumas and Hereford, campuses in Canyon and Lubbock, and every warehouse, school, and municipal building in between.
Full service areaThe Company
Veteran-owned. Brother-built.
Centennial Shield is the partnership of Ben and Brandon Terhune — roofing experience consolidated into one commercial contractor focused on the work the Panhandle actually needs: government, industrial, and multifamily roofs done to spec.
Work With Us
Put a certified SDVOSB roofing contractor on your bid list.
SDVOSB and Mule-Hide certified — ready for government, industrial, and commercial projects across the Texas Panhandle.
SDVOSB set-aside eligible — Government contracting capabilities →