Manufacturer Systems
Manufacturer-specific roof conversations kept focused on assembly fit, documentation, warranty terms, and maintenance obligations.
Manufacturer-specific roof conversations kept focused on assembly fit, documentation, warranty terms, and maintenance obligations.
On Des Moines roofs running Holcim Elevate products, the warranty terms and the membrane seams and penetrations have to line up before the first fastener goes in.
With an IKO assembly, step one is confirming the substrate suits the line, and step two is installing it to survive the derecho-grade winds of a Central Iowa summer.
Choosing a Soprema assembly for a Des Moines building means matching the membrane to its seams and penetrations and to the eave ice ridging a winter brings.
Specifying a GAF system for a Des Moines building means matching the membrane to its skylights and curbs and to the punishment of the wide January-to-July swing.
A Carlisle SynTec assembly earns its keep across the Des Moines metro when the parapet caps and through-wall flashings are detailed to spec and built for gusty spring fronts.
A Sika Sarnafil roof proves its worth in the capital city when the ponding zones and low areas around drains are detailed to spec against Polk County hail and straight-line wind.
Mule-Hide products serve a lot of Greater Des Moines roofs, and the discussion centers on assembly fit, equipment supports and walk pads, and a warranty file that stands up.
Versico systems appear on many Des Moines roofs, where the talk turns to assembly fit, the ponding zones and low areas around drains, and warranty documentation that survives scrutiny.
Johns Manville systems turn up on plenty of Des Moines decks, where the conversation runs to assembly fit, the perimeter and corner uplift zones, and warranty paperwork that holds.
When an owner already runs a Duro-Last roof, we document its condition and keep the maintenance records the warranty depends on through a winter of snow load and ice dams.