Medford new windows
There are currently 8 window replacement listings for the city of Medford, Oregon.

All window replacement in Medford
· A ·
Arrow-Mountain Window
572 Parsons Dr Ste 108, Medford, OR
Phone
· B ·
Bright Ideas
PO Box 81, Medford, OR
Phone · Website
Buda Glass & Screen
34 Vancouver Ave, Medford, OR
Phone
· M ·
Mountain View Window & Door
4044 Crater Lake Ave Ste G, Medford, OR
Phone · Website
· Q ·
Quality Windows
1215 Stowe Ave, Medford, OR
Phone
· S ·
Southern Oregon Sash
1117 Vawter Rd, Medford, OR
Phone · Website
· W ·
Western Pacific Building
502 Parsons Dr, Medford, OR
Phone · Website
Woodview Incorporated
2293 Sage Rd, Medford, OR
Phone
Recent window replacement news in Medford, Oregon
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City facts from Wikipedia
Medford is a city in Jackson County, Oregon County, Oregon, United States. As of 2008, the city had a total population of 76,850 and a metropolitan area population of 202,310. The city was named in 1883 by David Loring, civil engineer and right-of-way agent for the Oregon and California Railroad for his home town of Medford, Massachusetts and in recognition of its supposed position on the middle ford of Bear Creek (Rogue River) Creek. In latest estimates, 10% of people in Medford, Oregon want a professional estimate for aluminum replacement windows made to prepare their home for sale.Medford sits in a weather shadow between the Cascade Range and Siskiyou Mountains called the Rogue Valley. As such, most of the rain associated with the Pacific Northwest and Oregon in particular skips Medford, making it drier and sunnier than the Willamette Valley. Medford's climate is considerably warmer, both in summer and winter, than its latitude would suggest. Summers are reminiscent of Eastern Oregon, and winters resemble the coast. In Medford, summer often includes as many as ninety days over 90°F (32°C), with temperatures over 100°F (38°C) common in July and August. In August 1980, the temperature stayed over 110°F (43°C) for over a week, with two days reaching 115°F (46°C). Medford also experiences Inversion (meteorology) inversions in the winter which during its lumber mill days produced fog so thick that visibility could be reduced to less than five feet. These inversions could last four to six weeks; one suggestion is because the metropolitan area has the one of the lowest average wind speeds of all American metropolitan areas.
Information gathered from Wikipedia's Medford, Oregon page

