CertainTeed Grand Manor Georgian Brick Shingles
Confident terracotta-leaning shingle for Spanish revival and stucco builds.
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Georgian Brick is one of the rare asphalt shingles that commits to a warm-orange palette. Less aggressive than a true red but warmer than brown, it sits in the architectural sweet spot for Mediterranean and Spanish revival elevations.
The granule blend uses sienna and terracotta as the base with smaller portions of dark red and warm brown to deepen the color. Up close it reads as layered; from the street it collapses into one warm plane.
Works best with warm-tone stucco, stone accents, and bronze fixtures. Stay clear of cool-tone or contemporary palettes where the warmth fights.
| Type | Asphalt Fiberglass-mat, granule-coated, dimensional architectural shingle |
| Grade | Luxury / Top tier Laminated profile with dimensional shadow line |
| Warranty | Lifetime Manufacturer limited; transferable terms vary |
| Wind rating | 110 mph Upgradable to 130 mph with SureStart Plus. ASTM D7158 Class H. |
| Hail / impact | Class 4 UL 2218 Impact-Resistance Test rating. Class 4 is the highest grade; some Florida insurers offer a small discount on hail-rated roofs. |
| Fire rating | Class A ASTM E108 / UL 790 |
| Weight per square | 425 lbs Standard architectural asphalt |
| Algae resistance | StreakFighter 15-year algae warranty |
| Manufacturer | CertainTeed Malvern, PA · made in the USA |




We do not yet have full-render combination pages for this color family.
Materials-per-square pulled from retailer scrape (Lowe's/Home Depot Florida zips).
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Questions homeowners ask before they commit. Answered without sales spin.
A warm, anchored sienna with visible terracotta and dark red granule accents. In direct Florida sun it reads as a clear warm orange; in shade it pulls toward deep brown. Far more committed to warm tones than typical brown SKUs.
Approximately. From street distance most homeowners cannot distinguish a quality warm-sienna asphalt roof from a Mediterranean clay tile. Up close the texture differs (asphalt is flat, tile is barrel-curved) but the color reading is close.
Some. Warm-orange asphalt uses iron-oxide and ceramic pigments. Expect a slight shift toward warm brown over the first 7 to 10 years in Florida sun. Source: NRCA Asphalt Shingle Manual.
Yes, similar to other dark-tone asphalt SKUs. Florida attic-temperature impact is 5 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit at peak summer versus a light gray. Proper ventilation and a radiant barrier keep monthly cooling impact under 20 dollars.
Yes. Warm-orange asphalt SKUs are produced in low volumes. Plan a 2 to 4 week lead time and confirm stock with your installer before contract.
Georgian Brick is roughly half a step warmer and lighter than a committed-red shingle. In direct sun the difference is visible; in shade they read similarly. If you want the Mediterranean look without going fully red, this is the closer match.