Prestressed Guy
Structural
- May 11, 2007
- 390
I was called today by a client that is having the roof on one of her buildings re-roofed. When the contractor cut back the membrane that is covering the roof side of an EFIS parapet that was build in 2007 all of the roof side sheathing was completely dry-rotted. About 2" of each stud was also dry-rotted but all of the rest of the wood was as bright and yellow as the day it was built.
The clean side is covered with EFIS and there does not appear to be any ventilation of the stud cavities. My thinking is that the EFIS formed insulated vapor barrier on the street side and kept it cool. The roof side of the parapet had the roof membrane wrapped up the wall and over the top of the top plate which created a non-insulated vapor barrier on the warm side. With vapor barriers on both sides of the wall any moister that got in had nowhere to go and condensed on the warm face and rotted it while leaving the cool side unscathed.
Seem reasonable?
The clean side is covered with EFIS and there does not appear to be any ventilation of the stud cavities. My thinking is that the EFIS formed insulated vapor barrier on the street side and kept it cool. The roof side of the parapet had the roof membrane wrapped up the wall and over the top of the top plate which created a non-insulated vapor barrier on the warm side. With vapor barriers on both sides of the wall any moister that got in had nowhere to go and condensed on the warm face and rotted it while leaving the cool side unscathed.
Seem reasonable?