Commercial Roofing 101
*This is intended as a basic reference tool and not as a technical analysis.
A Commercial or Industrial Roof is Composed of Three Major Components:
1) Structural
2) Insulation
3) Membrane
Structural: What Holds You Up
Corrugated Metal Decking
Waterproofing Membrane: What Keeps Water Out of the Building
Bituminous Membrane
There are 3 Primary Waterproofing Systems:
Single Ply – plastics or rubbers
PVC, TPO, EPDM
Bituminous – petroleum based
Cold Processes, High Heat, Torch-Down, Hot Tar
Metal – steel, aluminum, or copper
Standing Seam, Corrugated Panels
Insulation: What Insulates the Topside of the Building
Bundles of ISO
The most common product used is a rigid foam product called polyisocyanurate (ISO)
The insulating properties are measured by R-Value
The R-Value of 1 inch of ISO is 5.7
ISO can be made either flat or tapered if you want to create more slope on a flat roof
Boards are attached to the roof system either by screws and plates or foam adhesives
If water gets through the top waterproofing of the roof, the ISO can absorb the water and may not leak
Designed by an engineer or architect
Supports the roof system and rooftop equipment
Most frequently metal decking over steel beams or trusses
There are other decks such as concrete or wood
Steel I-Beam
How Different Membrane Systems are Secured to the Roof
Single Ply – TPO, PVC, KEE, EPDM:
Mechanically attached with screws and plates into the decking
Or, adhered to insulation with adhesive (Fully Adhered)
Cold Process Modified Bitumen (Cold MB)
No heating involved
Solvent based adhesive is used between plies of roofing sheets
A multi-ply roof system generally with a surface of granules
Standard Built Up Roofing
Hot asphalt is mopped in place before a sheet is set.
The asphalt cools and is the waterproofing part of the system
Multiple plies of fiberglass sheets hold the asphalt in place
Metal
Always mechanically attached