Billboard Insider’s 2026 List of Billboard Structure Painting Contractors

“Which contractors paint billboard structures?” is a question Billboard Insider receives frequently.  Here is Billboard Insider’s list of out of home painting contractors, sorted by state.   If you have any additions, deletions or corrections please use the comment box below or email davewestburg@billboardinsider.com.  We want to know your company name, contact phone, contact email and what states your company works in.

 

Name States Serviced Contact Phone Email
Effective Signs and Advertising AL John Persons 334-749-0001 billboardsign@gmail.com
McDaniel Inc CA Matt McDaniel 909-591-8353 Admin@mcdanielinc.net
BM Steel Erectors CT Kevin Morales 203-443-0426 kevin@bmsteelerectors.com
Ultra-Lum Services CT Greg Ziomek 860-209-6580 greg@ultralumservices.com
Digitals, LLC. – Outdoor Advertising Specialities DE Dave Curry 267-566-8311 digitalsllc1@gmail.com
Jerry Prybus Electrical FL Jerry Prybus 850-784-2766 jerry@prybuselectric.com
RB Signs LLC FL Austin Fitzgerald Robert Fitzgerald 229-415-0125   229-292-0078 Rb.signs@yahoo.com
787 Contractor, LLC GA Jorge Mercado 843-575-0449 787contractor@gmail.com
Keenan Media GA Brett and Lane Keenan 678-806-3473 info@keenanmediallc.com
RB Signs LLC GA Austin Fitzgerald Robert Fitzgerald 229-415-0125   229-292-0078 Rb.signs@yahoo.com
Sign Solutions GA Jim Enright 256-213-6176 jim.enright@gmail.com
Vertical Advantage Solutions IL Howie Lincoln 563-542-6770 howie.vas@gmail.com
Vertical Advantage Solutions IA Howie Lincoln 563-542-6770 howie.vas@gmail.com
T&B Painting and Construction KY Terry Burden 270-399-5938 burdenterry@rocketmail.com
Ultra-Lum Services MA Greg Ziomek 860-209-6580 greg@ultralumservices.com
BM Steel Erectors MASS Kevin Morales 203-443-0426 kevin@bmsteelerectors.com
Digitals, LLC. – Outdoor Advertising Specialities MD Dave Curry 267-566-8311 digitalsllc1@gmail.com
Sign Solutions MS Jim Enright 256-213-6176 jim.enright@gmail.com
BM Steel Erectors NH Kevin Morales 203-443-0426 kevin@bmsteelerectors.com
Ultra-Lum Services NH Greg Ziomek 860-209-6580 greg@ultralumservices.com
BM Steel Erectors NJ Kevin Morales 203-443-0426 kevin@bmsteelerectors.com
Digitals, LLC. – Outdoor Advertising Specialities NJ Dave Curry 267-566-8311 digitalsllc1@gmail.com
Digitals, LLC. – Outdoor Advertising Specialities NY Dave Curry 267-566-8311 digitalsllc1@gmail.com
Billboards N More OK Blake Reynolds 830-486-2841 Blake@billboardsNMore.com
BM Steel Erectors PA Kevin Morales 203-443-0426 kevin@bmsteelerectors.com
Digitals, LLC. – Outdoor Advertising Specialities PA Dave Curry 267-566-8311 digitalsllc1@gmail.com
BM Steel Erectors RI Kevin Morales 203-443-0426 kevin@bmsteelerectors.com
Ultra-Lum Services RI Greg Ziomek 860-209-6580 greg@ultralumservices.com
787 Contractor, LLC SC Jorge Mercado 843-575-0449 787contractor@gmail.com
Grace Outdoor Services SC Jacob Stevenson and Josh Madsen 864-529-7924 or 803-319-5432 jacob@graceoutdoor.com
Link Electric SC Mark Link 864-809-2490 linkelectricinc@bellsouth.net
linkmrk91@bellsouth.net
Matte Graphics SC Matt Morton 864-247-4515 matt.morton08@gmail.com
Media Resources USA SC Richard williams 865-232-9629 rwilliams@mediaresources.com
Stonerock Outdoor SC Andrew Stonerock 843-615-8544 stonerockandrew@gmail.com
Tyndal Tree Service SC David Tyndal 864-256-9200 tyndaltreeservice@gmail.com
Blackhawk Sign Company TN Ryan Slatton, Jord Field 706-581-4406 Blackhawksignco@gmail.com
Sign Solutions TN Jim Enright 256-213-6176 jim.enright@gmail.com
Billboards N More TX Blake Reynolds 830-486-2841 Blake@billboardsNMore.com
Texas Southern Solutions TX Jose Ortiz 512-673-2162 info@texassouthernsolutions.com
Vertical Advantage Solutions WI Howie Lincoln 563-542-6770 howie.vas@gmail.com

 

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One Comment

  1. Thanks for the list. The most important question is about how each handle rust that typically is not completely removed. This is AI’s response. It would be informative to know how each contractor handles this situation.

    “ If complete rust removal isn’t practical, the goal shifts from clean steel to stabilizing existing rust, sealing out moisture, and applying a coating system that can tolerate less-than-perfect surface preparation.

    The best-performing approach depends on the amount of rust present, but for structural steel in industrial, commercial, agricultural, or outdoor environments, the following systems are widely used.

    1. Surface Preparation (Most Important Step)

    Even when you can’t remove all rust, remove everything that is loose.

    Recommended preparation:

    1. Scrape off loose scale and flaking rust.
    2. Needle-gun heavy rust pockets if possible.
    3. Wire brush or power-tool clean.
    4. Remove oil, grease, dirt, and salts.
    5. Blow off dust and debris.

    A power-tool clean surface (similar to SSPC-SP3 or SP11 standards) is usually achievable without abrasive blasting.

    2. Rust Converters (When Rust Remains)

    Rust converters chemically transform iron oxide into a more stable surface.

    Common high-quality products:

    * Corroseal
    * Ospho
    * Fertan

    These are useful where pitting prevents complete cleaning.

    Limitations:

    * Not a substitute for coating.
    * Must be top-coated according to manufacturer instructions.

    3. Moisture-Cured Urethane Primers (Excellent for Rusted Steel)

    For steel that cannot be blast-cleaned, moisture-cured urethanes are among the best performers.

    Examples:

    * Rust Grip
    * MCU-Coatings
    * Sherwin-Williams moisture-cured urethane primers

    Advantages:

    * Penetrate tightly adhered rust.
    * Extremely tough.
    * Excellent moisture resistance.
    * Often used on bridges, tanks, and structural steel.

    4. Surface-Tolerant Epoxy Primers (Industry Favorite)

    If budget allows, this is often the preferred professional solution.

    Examples:

    * Carboguard 893
    * Amerlock 2
    * Intergard 269
    * Macropoxy 646

    Benefits:

    * Designed for imperfectly prepared steel.
    * Excellent adhesion to tightly adhered rust.
    * Very good long-term corrosion protection.

    For many industrial structures, an epoxy mastic primer is the best balance of performance and practicality.

    5. Zinc-Rich Primers (Only When Surface Prep Is Better)

    These are outstanding corrosion inhibitors but generally require cleaner steel.

    Examples:

    * Carbozinc
    * Zinc Clad

    If substantial rust remains, epoxy mastics typically outperform zinc-rich systems.

    6. Recommended Coating System

    For a heavily weathered steel structure where blasting is not practical:

    Best Overall

    1. Power-tool clean
    2. Rust converter on pitted areas
    3. Surface-tolerant epoxy mastic primer (6–10 mils DFT)
    4. High-build epoxy intermediate coat
    5. Polyurethane topcoat

    This system can provide 10–20+ years of service in many environments.

    Budget System

    1. Power-tool clean
    2. Rust converter
    3. Moisture-cured urethane coating

    Usually performs far better than typical hardware-store rust paints.

    7. What to Avoid

    Avoid relying solely on:

    * Consumer-grade “paint over rust” products
    * Single-coat alkyd enamels
    * Latex paints directly on rusted steel
    * Applying coatings over loose scale

    Most coating failures occur because rust scale remains under the coating, not because the paint itself is poor.

    For Severe Corrosion

    If rust has reduced steel thickness, caused section loss, or produced lamination and deep scaling, coating alone is not enough. Have the structure inspected for:

    * Loss of load-carrying capacity
    * Connection deterioration
    * Corrosion at welds and bolted joints

    For critical structural steel, the highest-performing practical field system is usually:

    Power-tool cleaning → epoxy mastic primer → polyurethane topcoat, with rust converter used only where deep pitting prevents complete rust removal. This combination is commonly specified for bridges, industrial plants, agricultural structures, and older steel frameworks where abrasive blasting is impractical.”

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