Job 1: 18,000 sq ft TPO, ponding near the drains
Mid size warehouse off a county road. The membrane was nine years old, single ply TPO, mechanically attached. Owner thought he needed a full tear off because a roofer the year before quoted him near six figures. We walked it for an hour. Seams were sound. The ponding was a drain issue, not a membrane issue. We cleaned two drains, added crickets in two low spots, and heat welded patches on three punctures from an old satellite mount. Total: a little under $4,200. Membrane probably has another eight to ten years if he keeps the drains clear. The lesson in my notebook: do not let one bad quote drive a tear off decision. A real commercial roof inspection would have caught this years earlier.
One more note from that job. The maintenance guy told me he had been pulling leaves out of those drains every fall but never checking them in spring. Pollen, seed pods, and shingle grit from an adjacent building had built a soft dam two inches thick. We put him on a twice yearly walk schedule, spring and fall, with photos sent to ownership. That single habit change is worth more than most repair invoices.
Job 2: Modified bitumen, retail strip, active leak over a salon
This one came in on a Saturday after a storm. Water was running down a column inside a hair salon. We got a temporary dry in done that afternoon (peel and stick patch over the split, sandbags on the flashing). The permanent repair the following Tuesday ran $1,850. But the interior was already wet, drywall and insulation in the soffit, and the salon owner needed help with that side too. We looped in our restoration crew the same visit. If you have an active leak, the roof patch is only half the job; the ceiling, insulation, and any soaked sheetrock need attention before mold starts. We cover the interior side in our attic water damage from roof leaks notes.
Job 5: Metal roof on a logistics building, screw backout
One I see a lot. Twenty year old R-panel roof, exposed fasteners, half of them backed out a quarter inch. Not a single hole through the panels, but every fastener was a potential leak. We replaced about 4,800 screws with oversized neoprene washer fasteners, resealed the ridge, and walked away for $14,200 on a 30,000 sq ft roof. Owner had been quoted $380,000 for a full replacement by a national company. Standing seam is a different conversation, but if your existing metal roof has good panels and bad fasteners, that is a maintenance call, not a capital project.
What the numbers actually depend on
People want one number. Roofs do not work that way. The cost of your Pheasants Run commercial roof project depends on access (single story versus four story changes labor a lot), tear off (one layer or two), insulation R-value the energy code now requires, deck condition once we open it up, parapet height, the number of penetrations, and whether you need tapered insulation for drainage. A 20,000 sq ft TPO replacement might land at $8.50 per square foot on a clean, easy building and $13 on a complicated one. We bid both honestly and show you why.
How Pheasants Run Metal Roofing handles the first call
When you call about an active leak, we ask a short list of questions over the phone: where is the water showing up inside, how long has it been leaking, what is the roof type and rough age, and is anything valuable directly below. Severity gets assessed on that call. If you are actively leaking, tarping and dry in get prioritized. If the roof is dry and you are planning, we schedule the inspection fast and take the time to walk it properly. Either way, you get photos and a written scope, not a verbal guess from the parking lot.
Checklist before you sign any commercial roofing proposal
- Walk the roof with the contractor; ask them to point out what is driving each line item
- Confirm membrane thickness (60-mil is our default for TPO/EPDM on commercial)
- Ask about insulation R-value and whether tapered insulation is included
- Get the warranty in writing, separating manufacturer from workmanship coverage
- Verify tear off scope, including disposal and deck repair allowance
- Confirm flashing details at every penetration, curb, and parapet
- Ask who handles interior damage if a leak develops during the project
- Request photo documentation of existing conditions before work starts
- Check that the proposal names the specific membrane manufacturer and product line
Job 4: EPDM on a church, hail bruises after a June storm
This one was an insurance job. The membrane looked fine from the parking lot, but up top there were dozens of bruises where hail had crushed the rubber against the deck. We documented every hit, marked them with chalk, and shot photos with a scale card. The adjuster approved replacement on about 60% of the field. Owner's deductible was $5,000; total job came in near $48,000. Two takeaways from the notebook: insurance pays for storm damage but only if you document it well, and a storm damaged membrane that "looks okay" often is not. Most calls like this start with our commercial emergency roof repair line because the interior is already showing stains.
A side note on adjusters. The good ones want to see your evidence, not argue about it. We meet them on the roof, walk the bruises together, and provide a written scope keyed to photo numbers. The claim moves faster, the supplements are cleaner, and the building owner is not stuck translating between two trades that speak different languages.
Job 3: 40 year old built up roof on a small manufacturing plant
Owner wanted three more years out of it. I told him honestly: you might get three, you might get three months. Gravel was thin, blisters everywhere, flashings cracked at every penetration. We did $7,800 in targeted repairs to buy planning time, then bid the replacement at $11.20 per square foot for 60-mil TPO with new ISO insulation and tapered crickets. He chose replacement and we scheduled it for the following spring. Sometimes the field notes just read: "Tell them the truth."
The planning window also let him budget properly across two fiscal years, coordinate with a production shutdown, and avoid the rush pricing that comes with an emergency replacement in January. Patching to buy time is not a hack; it is a legitimate strategy when the conversation is honest.