Sustainability assessment for single ply roofing membranes



Similar documents
City of Houston Code Enforcement COOL ROOF CODE

Building Owners Guide to a Duro-Last System!

PVC ROOFING SYSTEMS BUILDING SOLUTIONS A SINGLE SOURCE FOR SINGLE-PLY ROOFING

Best Practices in Roof Design: Sustainable Energy Efficient Reroofing

JM s Commitment to Meeting Your Single Ply Roofing Needs. JM PVC with DuPont Elvaloy KEE (Ketone Ethylene Ester) Single Ply Systems

Avoiding the Landfill: The Recycling of Vinyl Roof Membranes

TPO: Getting Better With Age

Roofing Systems. New Applications / Re-Roofing / Maintenance

1. Adhered KEE membrane roofing system. 2. Mechanically fastened KEE membrane roofing system.

EPDM. Roofing systems

Jm Tpo systems Single Ply Roofing

Roofing & Waterproofing Forensics for the 21 st Century. Peter Brooks, President

Fluid-Applied Roofing for Repair and Renovation FACILITIES & MAINTENANCE PRIVATE UNIVERSITY PRODUCTS AND NEWS JULY 2015

FEDERAL LEADERSHIP IN HIGH PERFORMANCE and SUSTAINABLE BUILDINGS MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING

CRS Sales & Marketing

COMPARATIVE PERFORMANCE OF EPDM RUBBER ROOFING MEMBRANE AS PROTECTION AGAINST HAIL DAMAGE

Roofing Systems. There are many different systems, each with it's own special requirements and benefits. Browse through all the options below.

CertainTeed. Roofing Products. California OOL. Understanding Part 6 of Title 24, California Building Standards Code

COMMERCIAL ROOFING. Learning Objectives. Commercial Roofing Fundamentals May 2, 2012

BLUESTAR INFRARED. Description: Thermal Properties Comparison. Project Location: Client: 759 South Federal Hwy 225 Bayshore Drive

Roofing Retrofits: Focus on Sustainability

Roofing Sustainability

CHAPTER 7: Building Systems ROOFING SYSTEMS

Rooftop Matters Benchmark Report. Executive Summary

COMMERCIAL & LOW SLOPED ROOF SPECIALISTS TOTAL NDL SYSTEM MANUFACTURER WARRANTIES

ALL STAR ELECTRIC COMPANY 10,000 Trumbull SE, Suite #F Albuquerque, NM (505) voice & fax NM License

Commercial Roof Management

Green Roofs are the Way to Grow By Mark Gaulin

LEED PRESENTATION OUTLINE

PIMA Technical Bulletin #115. The High R Roof: Guidelines for Energy-Efficient Roofing and Re-Roofing. What is a High R Roof?

FAST FACTS ADVANTAGES OF MULTI PLY BUILT-UP ROOFING. Asphalt Roofing Manufacturers Association

Expectation of metal roofing reflected in LEED version 2.2

Thermal Performance of Vegetative Roofing Systems

Cool and sustainable roofing

How To Design A Sustainable Roofing

COMMERCIAL BUILDING APPLICATIONS

ROXUL Board Insulation Section Master Guide Specification (CAVITYROCK ) Page 1 April 2016

Predictive Service Life Tests for Roofing Membranes

ASHRAE Climatic Data Activities. Dru Crawley Didier Thevenard

THE ROOFPOINT ENERGY AND CARBON CALCULATOR A NEW MODELING TOOL FOR ROOFING PROFESSIONALS

SECTION THERMOPLASTIC MEMBRANE ROOFING

ADDENDUM No. 2. RFP No /27, Oakland Maintenance Center Facility Management Services

CARLISLE OWNER S MANUAL

INNOVATIVE. ADAPTABLE. ENERGY EFFICIENT.

Roof Insulation Building. Energy. Environment friendly e-library

Re-Cover Board-3. Insulation for Above the Deck ROOF WALL SPECIALTY

Article. Protecting the Building Envelope from Water Damage. MemBrain Smart Vapor Retarder & Air Barrier Film

NEW ELECTRICAL SUBSTATION Building 300 SECTION ETHYLENE-PROPYLENE-DIENE-MONOMER ROOFING WORK

CertainTeed SOLAR. Solar From A Proven Source

GSI. Geosynthetic Institute GRI. 475 Kedron Avenue Folsom, PA USA TEL (610) FAX (610) GII GAI GCI. GRI Test Method GM21

THERMOPLASTIC-POLYOLEFIN ROOFING (TPO) Data Center

03/05/14 REVISOR RSI/JC RD3945

Proposed San Antonio Sustainability Plan

This fact sheet provides an overview of options for managing solid

Mainline Pipe Rehabilitation Using Cured-in-Place Pipe (CIPP) & Folded Pipe Technology

Sustainable Roofing Systems for Federal Facilities

PROTOCOL FOR BUILDING ENERGY ANALYSIS SOFTWARE For Class 3, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 buildings

Construction Technologies Career Field Pathways and Course Structure

Polymeric membrane for roof waterproofing

What makes DECRA Roofing Systems unique?

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON Facilities Services Design Guide. Architectural. Roofing. Basis of Design

FEDERAL LEADERSHIP IN HIGH PERFORMANCE and SUSTAINABLE BUILDINGS MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING

California s Title 24 For Low-Slope Roofs. Building Energy Efficiency Standards

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ON RUBBER ELECTRICAL INSULATING GLOVES

Peel & Seal Self-Stick Roofing Solutions

TonerCategory Folder. Imation Laser Toner. The Professionals Choice.

IMMERSION MANAGEMENT SERVICE KG

Innovent LASER Packaged Fresh Air Conditioning Units

HVAC Costs. Reducing Building. Building owners are caught between two powerful forces the need to lower energy costs. By Stephen J.

SOLAR WATER HEATER USER AND INSTALLATION MANUAL

CREEK Technical Services, LLC

Continuous Insulation Using Polyiso Wall Sheathing

Visit Us Online. On the road to green design. NEW PRODUCT! basalite.com. all Paver Prod. are now avail paver. in all Basalite products.

Residential Windows, 3 rd edition Corrected index 1

SECTION HEAT PUMPS

Sika Sarnafil World Class Roofing and Waterproofing

Guide Specification STAYFLEX CORROSION CONTROL AND THERMAL INSULATION SYSTEM

Protection. Starts At The Top

2013 BUILDING ENERGY EFFICIENCY STANDARDS

Guidance for Stationary Refrigeration & Air-Conditioning

Instructions for Participating in ASHRAE s. Operations & Performance Management Professional (OPMP) Certification Program

Transcription:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 NSF International Standard for Sustainability Sustainability assessment for single ply roofing membranes 2 References The following documents contain provisions that, through reference, constitute provisions of this Standard. At the time this Standard was balloted, the editions listed below were valid. All documents are subject to revision, and parties are encouraged to investigate the possibility of applying the recent editions of the documents indicated below. 2.1 Normative references ANSI/ASHRAE/IESNA 90.1-2010 Energy Standard for Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings 1 ASTM D4434 / D4434M 09, Standard Specification for Poly(Vinyl Chloride) Sheet Roofing 2 ASTM D4637 / D4637M 10, Standard Specification for EPDM Sheet Used In Single-Ply Roof Membrane 2 ASTM D6754 10, Standard Specification for Ketone Ethylene Ester Based Sheet Roofing 2 ASTM D6878 08e1, Standard Specification for Thermoplastic Polyolefin Based Sheet Roofing2 ASTM D7067 05, Standard Specification for Reinforced White PIB Sheet Used in Roofing Membrane 2 ASTM E108 10a, Standard Test Methods for Fire Tests of Roof Coverings 2 NOTE For ASTM references, the standard referenced in the normative references will be the most current version of the standard. Products). To avoid having to ballot the standard every time a referenced standard is updated, the committee proposed to remove the dates from the ASTM references and make a note that the most current version will apply. 1 American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc. (ASHRAE), 1791 Tullie Circle, N.E. Atlanta, GA 30329. <www.ashrae.org>. 2 ASTM International, 100 Barr Harbor Drive, West Conshohocken, PA 19428-2959. <http://www.astm.org>.

45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 2.2 Informational references ASTM C1549 09, Standard Test Method for Determination of Solar Reflectance Near Ambient Temperature Using a Portable Solar Reflectometer 2 ASTM D6400 04, Standard Specification for Compostable Plastics 2 ASTM E903 96, Standard Test Method for Solar Absorbance, Reflectance, and Transmittance of Materials Using Integrating Spheres (Withdrawn 2005) 2 ASTM E1371 05, Standard Test Method for Gravimetric Determination of Phosphorus in Phosphorus- Copper Alloys or Phosphorus-Copper-Silver Alloys (Withdrawn 2006) 2 ASTM E1918 06, Standard Test Method for Measuring Solar Reflectance of Horizontal and Low-Sloped Surfaces in the Field 2 NOTE For ASTM references, the standard referenced in the normative references will be the most current version of the standard. Products). To avoid having to ballot the standard every time a referenced standard is updated, the committee proposed to remove the dates from the ASTM references and make a note that the most current version will apply. 5.7 Post-consumer single ply roofing membrane reclamation (maximum 3 points) The manufacturer shall demonstrate a program for reclamation and recycling of post-consumer single ply roof membrane. This program shall encourage recycling infrastructure development and should shall include at a minimum: chain of custody; tracking; and take-back process. 3 points shall be awarded for achieving increasing annual performance targets. Years 1 & 2 The manufacturer shall demonstrate that the program is active and ongoing at a rate of at least 10,000 pounds per year.

95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 Years 3, 4 & 5 The manufacturer shall demonstrate that the program is active and ongoing at a rate of at least twice the weight in Year 1. Years 6 and beyond The manufacturer shall demonstrate that the program is active and ongoing at a rate of at least four times the weight in Year 1. NOTE Year 1 is one year after implementation of a recycling program that meets the requirements of this credit. Products). The word shall is needed instead of should to show that this is mandatory, and not optional. 5.8 Pre-consumer single ply roofing membrane reclamation (maximum 2 points) The manufacturer shall receive 1 point for having a program for reclamation and recycling of preconsumer single ply roofing membrane. This program should shall include at a minimum: collection process; and recycling location. The manufacturer shall receive 1 point for demonstrating that the program is active and ongoing. Products). The word shall is needed instead of should to show that this is mandatory, and not optional. 6.5 Optimization of material resources Inefficient materials selection, supplier delivery, production processes, and warehousing operations can lead to high levels of waste to landfill generation and corresponding losses in production yields. The criteria in this section are intended to encourage the maximization of yield from product raw materials and to minimize the generation of waste to landfill materials during production from these operations. Products). The proposed change to this section clarifies waste from manufacturing process from the waste generated after the product leaves the manufacturing facility.

145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 6.5.1 Waste minimization program (maximum 1 point) The manufacturer shall receive 1 point for having documented an operational waste to landfill minimization program that includes quantification of waste generation rate. 6.5.2 Waste minimization (maximum 1 point) The manufacturer shall demonstrate overall reduction in waste to landfill from manufacturing facilities. The manufacturer may receive a maximum of 1 point and the measurement shall be based as follows: the manufacturer shall receive 1 point for demonstrating a year to year waste to landfill generation reduction rate of at least 2% per year (calculated as a five-year rolling average); or the manufacturer shall receive 1 point for demonstrating an annual average total waste to landfill generation rate of less than 2% of plant production on a weight basis. This credit is intended to allow a manufacturer to continue to receive 1 point after waste to landfill generation is reduced to a minimum level. Products). The proposed change to this section clarifies waste from manufacturing process from the waste generated after the product leaves the manufacturing facility. Since the minimum level is not defined, the committee proposed to move the last sentence from this section. 7.3.2 Service life (time in field) Assessments on existing roofs are based upon a range of climates. Three roofs require assessment; one from each of the following climates: Hot humid, hot dry, cold temperate (ASHRAE 90.1 1 ) climate zones. All three climates shall be documented for elements included in 7.3.2. 7.3.2.1 Prerequisite: The manufacturer shall document that a post-installation inspection protocol is in place and actively practiced (e.g., manufacturer s inspection for warranty issuance). Reason: This was discussed during the June 4, 2012 JC Meeting and is based on Issue Paper 2 (Submitted by Stan Graveline). There is a general assumption in the JC that the manufacturer s post-installation warranty would fulfill the requirements of this section but there is a question about whether auditors/certifiers would recognize this during certification. The proposed language is added to provide clarification. 7.3.2.2 Prerequisite: The manufacturer shall document a requirement for installer training provided by the manufacturer.

193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 7.3.2.3 Service life in field functionality determination (maximum 12 Points) The manufacturer shall receive 2 points for having a program in place that provides documentation that the roofing membranes are performing as intended in each regional geography as described in 7.3.2 over a minimum of 10 year service life. Additional points shall be earned as shown below. Documentation shall include at a minimum water tightness data, number of repairs, and repairability. The documentation shall be confirmed or attested to by a competent individual or organization as a third party. Third party representatives can include Professional Engineers, Registered Roof Consultants, or Registered Architects with experience inspecting roofs, evaluating them, and reporting their condition. 1 points for demonstrating product functionality in the field at 10 years of service life; or 4 points for demonstrating product functionality in the field at 15 years of service life; or 7 points for demonstrating product functionality in the field at 20 years of service life; or 10 points for demonstrating product functionality in the field at 30 years of service life. Reason: This was discussed during the June 4, 2012 JC Meeting and is based on Issue Paper 3 (Submitted by Stan Graveline). The committee proposed to remove the number of repairs because manufacturers would only have data about the repairs related to warranty, not repairs done by the building owner. The number of repairs is not believed to be a representative measurement of the longevity of the roof membrane because repairs can be the result of abuse or neglect of the roof, not the properties of the membrane itself. 7.4 Membrane surface contribution The intent of the criteria in this section is to assess the aspects of the roof construction contributing to reduction of urban heat island effect. 7.4.1 Prerequisite: For point eligibility, the manufacturer shall have formal specifications documenting product integration/incorporation for each requirement listed below. Reason: This was discussed during the June 4, 2012 JC Meeting and is based on Issue Paper 4 (Submitted by Stan Graveline). The committee proposed to remove Section 7.4.1 because it is unclear how this sentence should be interpreted. This sentence relates to the ballast system which is not the scope of this standard. 7.4.27.4.1 Reflectivity (maximum 3 points) The manufacturer shall receive up to 3 points for demonstrating Energy Star or equivalent reflectivity criteria. 1 point for meeting ENERGY STAR or equivalent three-year reflectivity criteria; or 2 points for meeting ENERGY STAR or equivalent three-year reflectivity criteria after 5 years in the field; or 3 points for meeting ENERGY STAR or equivalent three-year reflectivity value after 10 years in the field.

243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 The protocol for reflectivity determination shall be the CRRC-1 Method #1: Standard Practice for Measuring Solar Reflectance of a Flat, Opaque, and Heterogeneous Surface Using a Portable Solar Reflectometer. 7.5 Process based 7.5.1 Maintenance program and recommendations (maximum 3 points) The manufacturer shall receive 3 points for establishing a roofing membrane maintenance program conducted by a roofing professional (see 7.3.2.3 for examples of roofing professionals) and providing a method for communication to the end-user (Operations and Maintenance Manual or product information package). At a minimum, the program shall include inspections twice per year, after storm events, and recommendations for maintenance of accessory components (e.g., clear drains). The program should also include cleaning recommendations, inspection frequency, repair protocol, and chemical compatibility information for the expected service life of the membrane. 7.5.2 Quality management system (QMS) (maximum 7 points) To qualify for this credit, all of the singly ply roofing membranes shall be manufactured at the same facilities or facilities with a quality management system (QMS) satisfying at a minimum, the following: site specific qualification; and annual site audit. Products). Before the removal of the same facilities or, the sentence says that if there is only one manufacturing facility, then a QMS system is not needed.