Construction Network: Purpose and Scope
The National Stucco Repair Authority provider network maps the professional service landscape for stucco repair, remediation, and exterior cladding work across the United States. Providers span licensed contractors, specialty applicators, inspection firms, and related trade professionals operating under state licensing frameworks and building code requirements. The provider network is structured to support service seekers comparing qualified providers, industry professionals verifying sector classifications, and researchers analyzing how the stucco repair trade is organized at a national scale. For guidance on navigating the full provider interface, see How to Use This Stucco Repair Resource.
How to interpret providers
Each provider in this network represents a professional or firm operating within the stucco repair and exterior cladding service sector. Providers are organized by trade category, geographic service area, and licensing classification — not by paid rank or advertising status.
Trade category labels reflect the primary service scope of the verified entity:
- Stucco repair contractor — firms specializing in patching, crack remediation, delamination correction, and surface restoration on existing stucco systems
- Stucco applicator / installer — professionals holding plastering or stucco applicator licenses under state contractor licensing boards, typically performing new application alongside repair
- Exterior cladding specialist — contractors whose scope includes stucco alongside other cladding systems such as EIFS (Exterior Insulation and Finish Systems), fiber cement, and masonry veneer
- Inspection and moisture assessment firm — licensed inspectors or building consultants performing moisture intrusion diagnostics, stucco condition surveys, and pre-repair assessments
- Waterproofing and sealant contractor — firms whose primary scope involves water-resistive barrier (WRB) repair and penetration sealing, often engaged as part of a stucco remediation sequence
Geographic service area designations use state and metropolitan region classifications. A provider marked as serving "Southwest Region" indicates disclosed service coverage across Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, and California — not a proximity rank. Licensing status fields reflect the license type claimed by the verified entity; verification against state licensing board records is the responsibility of the service seeker. The Stucco Repair Providers section documents which data fields appear for each entry type.
Purpose of this provider network
This provider network exists to structure a fragmented service sector into a searchable, classification-based reference. Stucco repair sits at the intersection of plastering trades, moisture management, and building envelope performance — a combination that produces significant variation in how contractors are licensed, how work is scoped, and how quality standards are applied across jurisdictions.
In states such as California, Florida, and Arizona — where stucco exteriors account for a substantial share of residential construction — contractor licensing for plastering work falls under dedicated plastering or stucco license classifications administered by boards such as the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB), which issues the C-35 Lathing and Plastering license, or the Arizona Registrar of Contractors (AZ ROC). Other states route stucco work under general contractor or specialty contractor classifications with no dedicated plastering category. This jurisdictional fragmentation means that a service seeker in one state cannot assume the same license structure applies in another.
Building code frameworks add a second layer of complexity. The International Building Code (IBC) and International Residential Code (IRC), both published by the International Code Council (ICC), contain prescriptive requirements for stucco assemblies, weather-resistive barriers, lath attachment, and inspection intervals. Local jurisdictions adopt these codes — often with amendments — and administer permit and inspection processes through municipal or county building departments. The provider network reflects this regulatory structure by tagging providers with relevant state licensing categories and noting where permit-required work scopes apply.
What is included
The provider network covers service providers operating in the following defined scope areas:
- Repair and remediation of three-coat and two-coat portland cement stucco systems
- EIFS remediation, including drainage plane correction and base coat repair under systems governed by EIFS Industry Members Association (EIMA) guidelines
- Lath and substrate repair, including metal lath replacement, wood sheathing repair, and water-resistive barrier restoration
- Crack classification and repair, distinguishing between cosmetic hairline cracking (typically under 1/16 inch in width) and structural or moisture-pathway cracking requiring full-depth intervention
- Color coat and texture matching, a specialty finish skill distinct from structural repair
- Moisture intrusion assessment, performed by inspectors using tools such as pin-type and non-invasive capacitance meters, with reference to ASTM E2556 standards for stucco water resistance
Providers do not include general painting contractors whose scope does not extend to stucco substrate work, roofing contractors without documented exterior wall cladding experience, or unlicensed handyman services. The provider network does not list product manufacturers, material suppliers, or trade associations as service provider entries.
How entries are determined
Entry inclusion is governed by trade category eligibility, licensing documentation review, and geographic scope disclosure. The process follows a structured sequence:
- Category assignment — the submitting entity is mapped to one of the 5 trade categories defined in the providers interpretation section
- Licensing verification initiation — the verified license number and issuing board are logged for cross-reference against publicly accessible state licensing board databases
- Geographic scope confirmation — service area claims are validated against the submitting entity's registered business address and any disclosed branch or satellite operations
- Permit and inspection scope notation — where the verified entity's work scope involves permit-required construction (new stucco application, full remediation of building envelope systems), the entry is flagged to indicate that permit documentation may be required by local building authorities
- Publication — entries meeting all category and documentation criteria are published to the Stucco Repair Provider Network under the assigned trade category and regional designation
Entries are not ranked by review volume, advertising spend, or affiliate relationship. The provider network does not certify, endorse, or warrant the quality of any verified provider. Licensing status and scope accuracy reflect data at the time of entry creation; state licensing board records are the authoritative source for current license standing.
References
- 28 CFR Part 35 — Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability in State and Local Government Services
- Advisory Council on Historic Preservation — Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act
- California Contractors State License Board — License Classifications
- 21 CFR Part 110 — Current Good Manufacturing Practice in Manufacturing, Packing, or Holding Human Fo
- ADA Standards for Accessible Design — U.S. Department of Justice
- 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design — U.S. Department of Justice
- California Contractors State License Board (CSLB)
- 21 CFR Part 177 — Indirect Food Additives: Polymers, U.S. FDA / Electronic Code of Federal Regulatio