LATEST NEWS
Green Building | O H & S | Professional Services | Building Envelope
July 29, 2009
Letter to the Editor
Green roofs ‘inherently more impervious’ to fire
Re: Fire safety issue raised for green roofs, DCN July 13, 2009
There are a couple of issues I would like to address having been immersed in the roof garden industry for some time now.
In Germany, there are instances where fire (and even wind) insurance is discounted for buildings which have vegetated rooftops.
In the case of fire, a roof garden is inherently more impervious to fire damage to the building because the growth media, when blended to FLL standards, is predominantly a mix of inorganic calcined materials.
In most regions of the U.S. where we sell Roof Gardens, the base of the mix is expanded clay.
This is a substance very much like common brick — raw clay is “baked” at 800C until it expands, leaving a lightweight product with a large percentage of small air pockets.
Not to mention its stability at high temperatures, all of these internal voids make for relatively slow thermal transfer in the case of fire at the surface.
During a recent presentation to our international group, I conducted a demonstration outdoors and during the 20-minute seminar, I aimed a 10,000 BTU propane torch downward on a small (less than one-square metre) vegetated roof garden assembly for the duration of the event.
The small Roof Garden deck was outfitted with temperature sensors at the membrane level and insulation level. After 20 minutes, the membrane temperature had only risen three to four degrees C.
While the vegetation (sedum in this case) was heavily scorched, the membrane was hardly warm to the touch at the end of the demonstration and was in fine condition.
I have heard of one case of an actual roof garden fire that occurred in Washington State. Someone threw a lit cigarette off a balcony onto the roof garden below which was vegetated with tall and dry native grasses.
Within a few minutes a fire broke out and began to envelope the roof. Once the fire department arrived, it had all but burned itself out. No damage to the roof occurred and remediation simply involved replanting.
Even in the worst-case scenario of dry grass, damage is inherently limited since the grass does not have a large amount of energy, even with a high surface to air ratio which encourages fast burn times.
Most roofs are sedum which are far less prone to burning at a high rate since they always tend to have a high percentage of water stored away (sedums are succulents).
Sincerely,
Zach Williams
CCM Roof Garden Manager
Carlisle SynTec
RELATED COMMENTS
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- Steel hurdles for Aga Khan Museum build
- Benson Steel faces transport challenge on Toronto Yorkdale Mall construction project
- York Region, Ontario approves subway construction expenditures
- Toronto Construction Association presents ‘Best of the Best’ awards
- Bidding closes for Toronto 2015 Pan Am games venues
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 316 projects with a total value of $1,890,889,993 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on Thursday.
$65,000,000 Toronto ON Negotiated
RETIREMENT RESIDENCE, COMMUNITY CENTRE
$45,500,000 Toronto ON Negotiated
$40,000,000 Brampton ON Prebid
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Carpenters’ union official Ucal Powell named to Order of Ontario
- Masonry contractor Limen Group suspends site work for safety training day
- What comes next after green building?
- London & District Construction Association to study information and communication
- Dessau acquires Halifax engineering firm Maritime Testing
- Nominations now open for Canadian Railway Hall of Fame
- $196 million in construction work for Churchill Corp.
- Town of Mount Royal, Quebec launches library expansion project
- Montreal firms submit proposals for fire station redevelopment
- Toronto employer fined over worker using metal pliers in electrical panel
- Pre-cast concrete segment falls into river after gantry crane collapses
- Alberta budget scales back slightly on infrastructure spending
- Alberta throne speech hints at development plan
- Union claims construction oversight needed at defence department
- North Vancouver condos are First Place
- $2 billion oilsands expansion gets the green light
- Whistler asphalt plant operator wins court battle
- Research council's web wind tool helps with roof design
- PHOTO GALLERY: Merit Alberta open house
- Exploring the Canadian identity
- Immigration stream would be welcome
- Saskatchewan mayors want cash
- Yukon's first LEED structure earns its certification
- Co-operation planned on codes and standards
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Canada’s Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- Home starts and job levels diverge in Canada and the U.S. (February 8, 2012)
- Canada’s labour market flat in January but U.S. on a roll (February 3, 2012)
- Canada’s leading indicator series continued to charge ahead in December (January 23, 2012)
- More








