TECHNICAL PAPERS
Feb 12, 2010

Life-Cycle Costs of Commercial Roof Systems

Publication: Journal of Architectural Engineering
Volume 16, Issue 1

Abstract

The roofing industry in the United States generates annual revenues in excess of $23 billion. This represents a significant annual investment in infrastructure maintenance cost and the opportunity cost of these resources can significantly detract from an owner’s ability to invest in other areas. In addition, a failed or failing roof system represents a heightened opportunity for failure in the building envelope and inherently increases the risk of additional costs. Present roof asset management practice typically bases replacement decisions on fixed intervals, inspection results, maintenance issues, and, occasionally, failure risk. This paper develops a model for evaluating occupant costs and considering their impact in the roof management decision process through a total life-cycle cost (LCC) model that includes user/occupant cost model and correlates minimum total cost with improved intervention points in the asset deterioration cycle. The model is estimated from and applied to the extensive roof systems at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pa. For these roofs, we find that the least cost roof service lives are roughly 30 years, but there can be considerable variation around this average for individual roofs.

Get full access to this article

View all available purchase options and get full access to this article.

References

Bailey, D. M., et al. (1989). “ROOFER: An engineered management system (EMS) for bituminous built-up roofs.” U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Construction Engineering Research laboratories (USACERL) Technical Rep. M-90/04, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1993-3510-S/8013.
Coffelt, D. (2008). “Roof management improvement: Improving infrastructure management decision making through a consideration of total life cycle cost and deterioration.” Ph.D. dissertation, Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh.
Coffelt, D., and Hendrickson, C. T. (2008). “Inspection, condition assessment and management decisions for commercial roof systems.” J. Archit. Eng., accepted.
Construction Engineering Research Laboratory (CERL). (2009). “ROOFER-Engineered Management System.” U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, ⟨http://www.cecer.army.mil/td/tips/product/details.cfm?ID=101⟩ (June 11, 2009).
Kyle, B. R., et al. (2002). “The BELCAM Project: A summary of three years of research in service life prediction and information technology.” Proc., 9th Int. Conf. on the Durability of Building Materials and Components, National Research Council Canada (NRCC), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Lounis, Z., et al. (1999). “Decision-support system for service life asset management: The BELCAM project.” 8th Int. Conf. on the Durability of Building Materials and Components, NRCC, Vancouver, B.C., Canada.
Lounis, Z., and Vanier, D. J. (2000). “A multiobjective and stochastic system for building maintenance management.” Comput. Aided Civ. Infrastruct. Eng., 15(5), 320–329.
Morcous, G., and Rivard, H. (2003). “Computer assistance in managing the maintenance of low-slope roofs.” J. Comput. Civ. Eng., 17(4), 230–242.
Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry. (2009). “Building energy conservation act.” ⟨http://www.dli.state.pa.us/landi/CWP/view.asp?A=185&Q=70346⟩ (June 12, 2009).
U.S. Census Bureau. (2002). Industry statistics sampler NAICS 238160 roofing contractors.
Vanier, D. J., and Nesje, A. (1998). “Roofing system product model: Life cycle economic implications (NRCC-42662).” Proc., 2nd European Conf. on Product and Process Modeling in the Building Industry, National Research Council Canada (NRCC), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Journal of Architectural Engineering
Journal of Architectural Engineering
Volume 16Issue 1March 2010
Pages: 29 - 36

History

Received: Jun 25, 2008
Accepted: Jun 3, 2009
Published online: Feb 12, 2010
Published in print: Mar 2010

Permissions

Request permissions for this article.

Authors

Affiliations

Donald P. Coffelt, M.ASCE [email protected]
Director, Facilities Management Services, Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA 15213 (corresponding author). E-mail: [email protected]
Chris T. Hendrickson, Dist.M.ASCE [email protected]
Duquesne Light Company Professor of Engineering; and, Co-Director, Green Design Institute, Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA 15213. E-mail: [email protected]

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Citations

Download citation

If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.

Cited by

View Options

Get Access

Access content

Please select your options to get access

Log in/Register Log in via your institution (Shibboleth)
ASCE Members: Please log in to see member pricing

Purchase

Save for later Information on ASCE Library Cards
ASCE Library Cards let you download journal articles, proceedings papers, and available book chapters across the entire ASCE Library platform. ASCE Library Cards remain active for 24 months or until all downloads are used. Note: This content will be debited as one download at time of checkout.

Terms of Use: ASCE Library Cards are for individual, personal use only. Reselling, republishing, or forwarding the materials to libraries or reading rooms is prohibited.
ASCE Library Card (5 downloads)
$105.00
Add to cart
ASCE Library Card (20 downloads)
$280.00
Add to cart
Buy Single Article
$35.00
Add to cart

Get Access

Access content

Please select your options to get access

Log in/Register Log in via your institution (Shibboleth)
ASCE Members: Please log in to see member pricing

Purchase

Save for later Information on ASCE Library Cards
ASCE Library Cards let you download journal articles, proceedings papers, and available book chapters across the entire ASCE Library platform. ASCE Library Cards remain active for 24 months or until all downloads are used. Note: This content will be debited as one download at time of checkout.

Terms of Use: ASCE Library Cards are for individual, personal use only. Reselling, republishing, or forwarding the materials to libraries or reading rooms is prohibited.
ASCE Library Card (5 downloads)
$105.00
Add to cart
ASCE Library Card (20 downloads)
$280.00
Add to cart
Buy Single Article
$35.00
Add to cart

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Copy the content Link

Share with email

Email a colleague

Share