Choosing a Roofing Contractor
When selecting a roofer you should evaluate your builder as completely as you would when choosing a doctor, dentist or lawyer. With a choice as important as your home, it pays to be informed and to know that you are dealing with a reputable and accomplished builder. As a homeowner, it is effective to look closely at the proposal offered, the products selected, and the price/value relationship of the whole package.
Taking the time to check out a tradesman is a cost and aggravation saving task on your part. You do not want to call a roofing builder to clean up a mess left by another roofing contractor. You get what you pay for but why pay for it twice. We are not advocating paying the highest price to the most expensive contractor out there. Look for the first-class quality work, at an acceptable price.
You cannot choose a professional roofer by looking at an estimation and comparing prices. You should not ask a roofing company to leave an estimate at the door without knowing their character for yourself. An outside remodeling job is a main investment; would you trust hiring someone without meeting them?
You should allow yourself an minute of your time to sit down with the contractor. Both you as the customer and the builder need to discuss the proposal and the options achievable. You will be surprised at how many options you have. There are often great value upgrades available to you that most companies will not make you mindful of. Often these upgrades do not add a bulky increase in price, but offer a finer look, or a longer warranty, or the chance to have something distinct from your neighbors.
Get a referral from someone you know. Somebody like updating their homes so you should have no difficulty coming up with a list of contractors to call. Get a referral from friends you know. Verify licenses and insurance. Ask the tradesman for copies of the following documents: Contractor’s Certification, Worker’s Compensation status and Liability Insurance certificate. A prominent company should have no dispute providing copies of these documents. Get at least three references for your builder and call them. The company will likely give you references who had reasonable experiences, so be sure to ask them particular questions about workmanship that are extraordinary to you. You might be afraid about whether the builder cleaned up his work area and kept to his time line or whether the last invoice matched the estimate.
Check with the Better Business Bureau to find out if complaints have ever been entered or are outstanding against the contractor. Entreat for a written estimate. Phone Ringtones . Ecommerce . Any tradesman who does not provide you with a written estimation should be crossed off your list immediately. Get at least three estimates and then contrast prices with what is contained. Keep in mind the lowest bidder is not always the advantageous. Sign a written contract. The contract should plainly spell out all the steps the builder will take from start to end of your job, what supplies are included, the payment plan and the time line for the project.
Advanced Roofing Inc.
Birdair puts wrap on Minnesota dome project
Just nine months after a roof collapsed during a snowstorm, Birdair Inc.
has completed the installation of replacement roof at the Metrodome in Minneapolis.
Work began in March and was completed ahead of schedule, said officials from the Amherst-based company.
Birdair served as roofing subcontractor for the facility, fabricating and installing a new cover on an aggressive five-month time line after a snow and ice storm caused the facility’s previous roof to deflate in December 2010. The company installed the Metrodome’s original roof in 1982 and replaced the structure’s 10-acre roof with more than 700,000 square feet of fiberglass outer and liner membrane material. The new roof looks similar to the old roof, but features a lower profile.
“Birdair provided us with a new generation of roofing material that is stronger and adds more transparency for sunlight,” said Steven Maki, director of facilities and engineering for the Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission.
The roof fabric is stronger than the previous roof due to advancements in fabric membrane technology past 25 years and is made up of 106-diamond, rectangle and triangle panels. Each panel weighs between two and a half to three tons.
According to the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, getting the job done in a timely manner will net Birdair a $500,000 bonus.
The installation crew consisted of Birdair supervisors, local ironworkers, laborers and equipment operators. Air pillows were used during installation to resist uplift of the panels under high wind conditions and to safeguard the existing fabric that was used as a work surface. The Metrodome was inflated in mid-July by a dozen 100-horsepower fans that lifted the ceiling to its full height in about 45 minutes.
“We are glad the Metrodome is now once again part of the Minneapolis skyline with a new roof,” said Matt Raybon, Birdair construction manager.
Original Author: James Fink on Biz Journals
Why Choose Advanced Roofing
Linux Software . Impotence Cures . Blog Software . You can find us on the BBB website with an A+ rating and have numerous ratings on Angieâs List. We are certified roof contractor for GAF Shingle Manufacturer, IKO, Owens Corning and Certainteed
- GAF Master Elite Contractor #ME12714
- Owens Corning Preferred Contractor
- Certainteed Master Shingle Contractor
- Certified Velux Skylight Installer
- A+ BBB rating -Complaint Free joining “2001″
- National Roofing Contractor Association Member
- State of Illinois Roofing License #104-0011690
- Four decades of service to the entire Chicago land area
- We can supply waivers of lien if desired
- Phone numbers provided to you of our supervisors and customer service reps for after hour question and/or concerns that may arise

Roofing Glossary
Deck/sheathing - The surface-usually plywood or oriented-strand board (OSB)-to which roofing materials are applied.
Dormer – A small structure projecting from a sloped roof, usually with a window.
Drip Edge – An L-shaped strip (usually metal) installed along the edges of the roof to allow water runoff to drip clear of the deck, eaves, and siding.
Eave – The horizontal lower edge of a sloped roof.
Fascia – A flat board, band, or face located at the outer edge of the cornice.
Felt/Underlayment – A sheet of asphalt-saturated material used as a secondary layer of protection for the roof deck.
Fire Rating – UL system for classifying the fire resistance of various materials. Bible Study . Roofing materials are rated “Class A,” “B,” or “C,” with “A” materials having the highest resistance to fire originating outside the structure.
Flashing – Sheet metal used to prevent the seepage of water around any intersection or projection in a roof, such as vent pipes, chimneys, valleys, and the joints at vertical walls.
Louvers – Slatted devices installed in the gable or soffit (the underside of the eaves) to ventilate the space below the roof deck and equalize air temperature and moisture.
Oriented-strand board (OSB) – Roof deck panels (4 feet x 8 feet) made of narrow bits of wood, laid down lengthwise and crosswise in layers, held together with a resin “glue.” Often used as a substitute for plywood sheets.
Penetrations – Vents, pipes, stacks, chimneys – anything that sticks up through the roof deck.
Rafter – The supporting framing to which the roof deck is attached.
Rake – The inclined edge of a roof over a wall.
Ridge – The top edge of two intersecting, sloping roof surfaces.
Sheathing – The boards or sheet materials that are fastened to the roof’s rafters to cover the house.
Slope – Measured by rise in inches for each 12 inches of horizontal run: A roof with a 4-in-12 slope rises 4 inches for every foot.
Square – The common measurement for roof area is 100 square feet (10 feet x 10 feet).
Truss – The engineered components that have supplemented rafters in many newer houses. Linux Software . Impotence Cures . They are designed for specific applications and cannot be cut or altered in any way.
Valley – The angle formed at the intersection of two sloping roof surfaces.
Vapor Retarder – A material designed to restrict the passage of water vapor through a roof system or wall.

