All Storm Solutions

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All Storm Solutions is a full service general contractor company with over 20 years of experience specializing in roofing, siding, window installations, window replacements, gutter repair, gutter replacements, and hail damage repair for residential and commercial properties. We work around the clock to make sure you and your family stays safe through storms, year round. From storm damage to prevention, we are the team for you!

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Contact All Storm Solutions Inc. for Gutter Cleaning, Gutter Installation, Gutters, Hail Damage, New Windows, Replacement Windows, Roof Repair, Roofer, Roofing, Roofing Companies, Roofing Contractors, Seamless Gutters, Siding, Window Installation, and Windows. Proudly supporting the areas of Aurora, Belvidere, Bloomington-Normal, Bolingbrook, Cary, Downers Grove, Elgin, Geneva, Lake In The Hills, Montgomery, Naperville, North Aurora, Oswego, Rockford, South Elgin, and surrounding areas.

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Contact All Storm Solutions Inc. for Gutter Cleaning in Elgin, Gutter Installation in Elgin, Gutters in Elgin, Hail Damage in Elgin, New Windows in Elgin, Replacement Windows in Elgin, Roof Repair in Elgin, Roofer in Elgin, Roofing in Elgin, Roofing Companies in Elgin, Roofing Contractors in Elgin, Seamless Gutters in Elgin, Siding in Elgin, Window Installation in Elgin, Windows in Elgin, and in surrounding areas.

Below is some general information about Elgin:

Elgin is a city in Cook and Kane counties in the northern part of the U.S. state of Illinois. Located roughly 35 mi northwest of Chicago, it lies along the Fox River. As of 2012, the city had a total population of 109,927, making it the eighth-largest city in Illinois.

As of the census of 2010, there were 108,190 people, and 35,837 households. The population density was 2,911.2 people per square mile. There were 37,848 housing units at an average density of 1,306.5 per square mile. The racial makeup of the city was 65.9% White, 7.4% African American, 1.40% Native American, 5.4% Asian, 16.3% from other races, and 3.6% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 43.6% of the population. A significant portion of Elgins Asian population is of Laotian origin.

Elgin ranks as one of the fastest growing cities in Illinois. In June 2005, the Chicago Tribune quoted Elgin Mayor Ed Schock saying that Elgin will in 40 years be the second largest city in Illinois. The citys Far West Development Strategy calls for the construction of 14,000 homes on agricultural land west of Randall Road, which has become a major retail corridor connecting the Fox Valley. Elgins downtown area has also attracted developer interest. Three large residential projects were to be completed in the downtown by 2007, at a total cost of more than $100 million. The Gail Borden Public Library moved into a new $30 million 460,000 volume-capacity building in October 2003. Other recent projects include the citys $41 million recreational center, the Centre of Elgin. The citys rapid growth has been accompanied by increased concerns about traffic, urban sprawl, and the citys capacity to provide services to new residents. City officials insist that Elgins water plants have ample capacity to serve new residents. Elgin is known for the quality of its tap water, which in the past ten years has been named both the dirtiest in Kane County and the absolute worst in Illinois.

Elgins city parks include 112-acre Lords Park, which features the Elgin Public Museum and a herd of American bison, and 121-acre Wing Park, which includes a golf course. Other golf courses within Elgin include the Highlands of Elgin, the Elgin Country Club, and Bowes Creek Country Club. The Centre of Elgin, which among other features includes an aquatic park and a climbing wall, remains one of the largest municipal recreation centers in the United States. The Elgin Sports Complex on the citys southwest side offers ten lighted ballfields, ten soccer fields and The Hill BMX track. The complex hosts several local, regional and national tournaments every year. Elgin connects to Algonquin and Dundee to the north, and St. Charles, Geneva, and Batavia to the south by the Fox River Trail bike path.

Elgin boasts two highly protected nature preserves, the Bluff Spring Fen and Trout Park. For its size, Bluff Spring Fen has a remarkable number of distinct plant communities, including a hill prairie and a fen, or alkaline spring marshland, which is home to several rare orchids. Trout Park also includes a similar calcareous seep community, with the addition of a unique forest community of oaks, ashes, maples, and uncommon species such as arborvitae and witch-hazel. When the park was created in the 1920s, the local newspaper ran a lengthy front-page story with lists of the plant species of Trout Park, reflecting both the great variety of plants present and the interest Elginites had in conservation. In the 1960s, the Northwest Tollway bisected the site and reduced it in size.

Source: Elgin on Wikipedia