English
English
Español
Français

Sign Up for Our E-News!

Join over 18,000 other roofers who get the Week in Roofing for a recap of this week's best industry posts!

Sign Up
RCS - Sidebar - L&L contest
NRCA - Sidebar - Roofing week
test
RClub pinned ad
SRS - Sidebar Ad - We Stand With Ukraine
Information pinned ad
RoofersCoffeeShop - Where The Industry Meets!
English
English
Español
Français

All Eyes (and Feet) are on the Rooftops

Georgia-Pacific All Eyes on Rooftops
April 8, 2021 at 2:00 p.m.

By Georgia-Pacific Building Products. 

Residential apartments and office buildings around the world are opening their rooftops for residents and tenants. Is yours ready for the foot traffic?  

New York City was one of the first COVID-19 hotspots in the U.S. and continues to be a location of newsworthy coronavirus changes. The lockdown restrictions in New York for the past year have taken their toll on residents, and rooftops have become a safe haven for New Yorkers and others living in cities around the world. 

“During the lockdown, city dwellers went out on rooftops, not only to get some exercise in the fresh air, which seemed to be the most favored rooftop activity, but also to work, make calls, fly a kite or a drone, dance, read a book, play an instrument, make art, drink coffee, do sunbathing or gardening, have socially distant conversations with their neighbors, or wave to neighbors from next roofs,” says Monika Hankova in her recent article for Untapped New York.  

Hankova also notes that building rooftops were the setting for safe nightly gatherings to applaud New York’s front-line workers. As everyday heroes switched shifts at health facilities, came home from long days, or left to start their long nights, the seven p.m. rooftop celebrations – a trend that began in the UK and was adopted worldwide – gave neighbors a chance to both show their gratitude and get outside for a little while.  

On a lighter note,  

  • One man initiated and executed a rooftop date with a woman he spotted from his own rooftop across the street. He shared his experience on TikTok, much to the delight of quarantined singles everywhere.  

  • Two yoga studios in Cleveland joined forces to offer rooftop classes. 

  • A downtown Denver co-working business opened a rooftop space to accommodate more displaced office workers, and  

  • A cartoonist in Jordan used rooftops and their surfaces to bring community members together in an artistic endeavor. 

Going out by going up  

Now that many cities are cautiously reopening, businesses are looking to rooftops as venues for serving more customers.  

When Massachusetts entered its second phase of reopening, dining was only permitted outdoors with tables spaced at least six feet from each other, and only six diners per table. Expanding beyond patios to rooftop dining allowed restaurants to seat more diners while still maintaining social distance.  

And now that America’s favorite pastime is finally making its summer debut, rooftops may be one of the few places that baseball spectators will be able to catch a game “in person.” Wrigley Field will be closed to spectators at least to start the season, but the Ricketts family, which owns the team, also owns several buildings surrounding the stadium and could open their rooftops to spectators if approved by the City of Chicago.  

Building rooftops to handle foot traffic  

At Georgia Pacific (GP), we know building rooftops are where HVAC equipment and solar panels usually live, but communal tenant spaces for both residential buildings and commercial offices are also on the rise. A non-profit called Green Roofs for Healthy Cities estimates that rooftops represent 15-35% of cities’ total land area. This, along with anecdotal evidence of more frequent rooftop use, means building owners and designers must take increased foot traffic into account for their rooftop spaces.  

Products like DensDeck® Prime Roof Board can make those considerations much easier. For rooftops that will become high-traffic areas, DensDeck® Prime cover boards are designed to manage heavy loads and protects the roof assembly from increased foot traffic both during construction and during its usage as a communal space.  

Whether you expect your building’s roof to take on loads from new tenant amenities and their associated foot traffic, or you expect to upgrade rooftop mechanical systems, make sure DensDeck® Prime Roof Board is part of your plan to protect this valuable real estate.  

DensDeck® and DensDeck® Prime Roof Boards should not be subjected to abnormal or excessive loads or foot traffic, such as, but not limited to, use on plaza decks or under steel-wheeled equipment that may fracture or damage the panels. Provide suitable roofing system protection when required. 

Learn more about Georgia-Pacific Building Products in their RoofersCoffeeShop® Directory or visit www.buildgp.com.  

Original article source: Georgia-Pacific Building Products  



Recommended For You


Comments

There are currently no comments here.

Leave a Reply

Commenting is only accessible to RCS users.

Have an account? Login to leave a comment!


Sign In
JOBBA - Banner Ad - JOBBA Now Available in Spanish!
English
English
Español
Français

Sign Up for Our E-News!

Join over 18,000 other roofers who get the Week in Roofing for a recap of this week's best industry posts!

Sign Up
test
Information pinned ad
Everroof - Sidebar Ad - Podcast Promo
RClub pinned ad
Estimating Edge - Sidebar Ad - Danny Boyle
Western Colloid - Sidebar Ad - 3 Things Your Manufacturers Should be Doing For You eBook (2)