Bloomingdale Homes Are Getting Older, and the Paint Shows It.
Bloomingdale is the largest neighborhood in Hillsborough County. Roughly 5,200 single-family homes spread across 32 subdivisions, and most of them went up between 1979 and the early 2000s. Bloomingdale Cove was finished out between 1996 and 2004, while the original sections off Bloomingdale Avenue date back to the first phase. That means a huge share of these homes are now 25 to 45 years old, and the walls have lived a full life: builder beige that never got touched, scuffed hallways, flat trim that has yellowed, and the occasional popcorn-era ceiling.
We paint these rooms for a living. Older Florida drywall needs honest prep before a brush touches it. We wash the walls down first, fill the nail holes and the dents along high-traffic halls near the garage, prime any patches and color jumps, then lay down two even coats. The point is a finish that looks current and lasts, not a quick recoat that flashes and peels in two summers.
Bloomingdale is also an HOA community. Sixteen of the 32 subdivisions carry mandatory HOAs, with 44 separate deed restrictions across the neighborhood. Interior color is yours to choose, but if you are touching anything an HOA cares about, we will work to the palette you have been approved for. No surprises that land you a letter from the association.