Not to reiterate too much that has been said many times about PEMB, but in theory these structures could be some of the better engineered and designed structures around. In theory. But enter a "budget minded" owner and a wham-bam GC who treats the EOR of the foundations as a necessary pain in the butt, and who is left in charge of these projects?
Also, PEMB have evolved from warehouses and shop buildings with a few overhead doors and that is about it, into retail shopping centers, churches and sometimes even office buildings... Have the contractors, PEMB, A and E involved in these types of more complex projects evolved with these buildings or are they still being treated like a warehouse with a slab?
Now I have also had some very good experiences with PEMB where the architect, contractor and ourselves were all experienced with PEMB, and got together on the phone or in person during design and lots of communication. We all knew who was designing what and we were all together on the same team. The contractor also used the same PEMB which is a big national company and we actually met with a structural engineer that designed the building!
There was a great article a few years ago in one of the structural rags about failures of PEMB. Examples of failures included no site inspection or observations from the PEMB engineer (since if there is an EOR he is not responsible for the building structure, just the foundations). Many PEMB companies offer little to no support during erection, just here is your erector set, here are the instructions, go put it together. And not to be too harsh on the PEMB, the owners don't want to pay for any additional services either so they get what they pay for. In some cases, it is a pre-fab kit building, even if too complex to be treated as such...
I don't want to hijack this thread about snow on roof collapses, since I live in Florida anyway. But knowing also that many PEMB seem to be designed within a hair on a gnat's @$$ of code requirements, there probably is not much fluff in any of their new designs, its no surprise that there are these snow collapses. These often get built in more rural areas where the building department, engineering, and contracting services may leave something to be desired. That is without mentioning the older PEMB buildings and the effects of energy requirements on snow and ice dams and all that good stuff I don't deal with
A PEMB in general seems to have a lot less redundancy and due to the light gage members, bracing becomes very critical. Miss a couple of braces and your roof could be in trouble.