ABSTRACT

The book starts by setting out the duties of a building pathologist in the context of the modern roofing industry, defining failure and explaining its underlying causes. The main chapters then deal with the main specific types of failure: fire, shrinkage and roofing systems displacement, calendar shrinkage, foam insulation shrinkage and 'stretched' membranes, plasticizer migration, bitumen incompatibility, built-up roofing felt porosity, blistering, thermal insulation instability, foam insulation problems, torch applications, polymer dispersion, asphalt-glass fibre shingle splitting, lack of appropriate venting, problems with cool roofing and problems with organic fibre-portland cement shingles. The book concludes with an outline of the principal rules for long service life roofing.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |5 pages

industry in 2001

chapter |17 pages

and materials

chapter |11 pages

materials (continued)

chapter |56 pages

insulation

chapter |5 pages

specifications

chapter |2 pages

Case studies

chapter |6 pages

warehouse

chapter |6 pages

splitting return

chapter |2 pages

design advice

chapter |2 pages

maintenance man

chapter |9 pages

paper storage

chapter |2 pages

fiber felts

chapter |4 pages

condominiums

chapter |4 pages

fiber shingles

chapter |2 pages

movement

chapter |2 pages

insulating concrete

chapter |12 pages

insulation

chapter |7 pages

backouts

chapter |2 pages

roofing

chapter |2 pages

adhesion

chapter |4 pages

plywood

chapter |2 pages

waterproofing

chapter |4 pages

airport roof

chapter |5 pages

joints

chapter |4 pages

waterproofing

chapter |72 pages

adhesion