I don't know what downs are, but the estimate includes new gutters. Looks like they didn't leave the estimate - they just showed me a pad of paper where they had calculated $15,000 (with a $1,500 incentive making it $13,500). This was for aluminum, not copper.
Darwin, I guess the GAF Timberland comes in reflective and normal?
So you use normal and these guys have a reflective version?
A steel roof doesn't seem that attractive an option. I still don't know who to call for an objective inspection but think I'll call a roofing company.
I was simply trying to give a comparison, a standing seam roof is light years ahead quality wise than a shingle roof. Again, most places in the country you can get a real tile roof for that kind of money which is a lifetime roof.
Personally, I would get multiple quotes before doing anything and I honestly wouldn't consider a cool shingle a worthy investment in your environment.
Edit: I misspoke the first time. I use whatever an architect specifies most of the time but when I do dabble in residential I use GAF TimberLINE shingles which does offer a few "cool" colors but as I have previously said, the SRI's between a normal light colored shingle and a "cool" shingle are so insignificant that I don't push them and no one asks for them.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not in love with GAF shingles for any particular reason, by dollars shingle roofing is by far the smallest portion of my business. GAF Timberline is just the standard architectural shingle my favorite distributor stocks so that's what I use when it's my choice or I'm doing residential. If a residential customer demands a different brand that my supplier doesn't carry I just walk, my relationship with my distributor plays a huge part in my projects running so smoothly.