Romulus Storm Damage

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Residential Storm Damage Roofing in Romulus, MI | Protecht Exteriors
Storm Damage Roofing in Romulus — Free Inspection · FAA Noise Zone Assessment Included · 313-513-ROOF (7663)
Romulus, MI · 48174 · Wayne County · Near DTW · I-275 / I-94 Corridor

Residential Storm Damage Roofing in Romulus, Michigan

Free Inspection · Hail · Wind · Tree Impact · FAA Noise Zone Ventilation Assessment · Water Infiltration · Wayne County Permit Pulled

48174 Wayne County Near DTW Free Inspection Insurance Specialists

Romulus covers 36 square miles and carries a storm damage consideration that appears nowhere else in our service territory: a significant portion of its residential neighborhoods sit within the DTW FAA noise abatement zone, where government-funded attic insulation programs have blocked soffit ventilation on a meaningful number of homes. A storm breach in an attic where the intake ventilation is already compromised by blown-in FAA insulation is a storm breach in an attic that is already running elevated baseline humidity — meaning the 48-hour window to Stachybotrys chartarum colonization conditions is shorter than it would be in a properly ventilated home. Add the standard visibility problem — a homeowner at ground level is 25 to 35 feet below their roof at an angle where a quarter-sized hail impact is geometrically invisible — and the Romulus post-storm inspection argument is both the same as everywhere else and uniquely urgent here. Michigan's 2-year filing window starts at the storm date. Wayne County permits are pulled on every job. Protecht Exteriors is 20 minutes southeast via I-75 and the inspection is free.

Free Storm Inspection · No Obligation FAA Noise Zone Ventilation Assessment Included Hail · Wind · Tree · Water Infiltration Documented Wayne County Permit Pulled on Every Job Michigan's 2-Year Window — Don't Let It Close

Hail, Wind & Tree Damage in Romulus — Why the DTW Factor Changes the Inspection Scope

The Standard Storm Damage Arguments Apply Here — Plus One That Applies Only in Romulus

The geometry problem is the same in Romulus as anywhere else: standing in a driveway, a homeowner is 25 to 35 feet below the roof surface looking upward at an angle that makes most of the roof plane nearly parallel to the line of sight. Hail impacts at the threshold of a claim-worthy event are approximately one inch in diameter — the size of a quarter. At 30 feet upward, that impact is invisible. Wind sealant failure on a 30-year-old sealant strip requires lifting the shingle tab to detect. Branch abrasion removes granules in linear patterns that look like ordinary weathering from below. None of these damage types can be assessed from the driveway. All of them drive the majority of storm insurance claims in Wayne County. So far, Romulus is like every other city we serve. What is different is what may be happening in the attic before the storm even arrives.

Hail damage to Romulus shingles follows the same mechanics as elsewhere — circular granule loss at impact points, UV oxidation of exposed mat, fiberglass mat fracture on older shingles detectable only by the flex test at roof level — but the airport proximity adds a dimension that matters for the claim narrative. Homes directly under DTW's active approach corridors have been subject to prolonged aircraft vibration that can accelerate micro-cracking in aging flashing components, step flashing sealants, and pipe boot collars beyond what the home's calendar age alone would predict. On an airport-adjacent Romulus home, the flashing junction that might hold another four or five years on a comparable Flat Rock home may already be at the edge of failure before the storm tests it. After a hail event, secondary inspection of all flashing junctions and penetrations on these homes is more important than on homes without the vibration factor.

Wind damage in Romulus has a geographic variable that doesn't appear in Downriver's denser communities: Romulus's 36-square-mile footprint includes significant open terrain, particularly in the western and southern portions of the city along Pennsylvania Road and the Middlebelt corridor. Open terrain provides less windbreak than dense suburban development — storm wind arrives at rooflines on larger-lot Romulus properties with more velocity than in comparably built neighborhoods further east. The I-275 and I-94 corridors form the city's eastern and northern boundaries, and the flat terrain along these corridors provides essentially no buffering for homes in the neighborhoods immediately adjacent. On Romulus ranches and farmhouse-style builds in the open western portions of the city, sealant strip adhesion after a significant wind event should be assessed with the open-terrain exposure factor in mind.

Tree and branch damage in Romulus spans a wide range depending on which part of the city a home is in. The downtown core along Goddard Road and the older established neighborhoods around Wayne Road carry mature oak and elm canopy that produces real branch-fall and abrasion risk during high-wind events. The larger-lot areas in the city's western and southern portions have mature trees on bigger parcels with longer potential fall distances. Branch abrasion — the limb dragged across the shingle surface by sustained wind — is particularly relevant on Romulus's early Craftsman and farmhouse-style homes, where original board sheathing is sometimes still present beneath the shingles. A heavy branch dragged across the surface can split original board sheathing along grain lines in a way that is invisible from below and entirely missed without a roof-level inspection.

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The DTW Factor — What Airport Proximity Adds to the Storm Damage Picture

Romulus is the only city in our service territory where Detroit Metro Airport creates a specific, documented set of roofing considerations that belongs in every storm damage inspection. Here's what it means and why it matters.

  • FAA noise insulation blocking soffit ventilation Government-funded noise-attenuation insulation programs have blown-in attic insulation on a significant number of homes in Romulus's FAA noise abatement zone. When that insulation is installed without maintaining clearance at the soffit vents, it blocks the intake side of the attic ventilation system. Result: the attic overheats in summer, accumulates moisture in winter, and creates elevated baseline humidity that compresses the Stachybotrys timeline after a storm breach. On airport-adjacent homes, ventilation intake is the first attic check on every storm inspection.
  • Aircraft vibration accelerating flashing sealant fatigue Prolonged aircraft vibration over homes near active DTW approach corridors can accelerate micro-cracking in aging flashing sealants, pipe boot collars, and step flashing beyond what calendar age alone predicts. A flashing junction that might hold another five years on a comparable inland home may be at the failure threshold on a Romulus home sitting under a busy approach path. Post-storm secondary inspection of all flashing and penetrations is more important here than elsewhere.
  • Shingle degradation accelerated by ventilation-driven heat cycling When blocked soffit ventilation causes attic temperatures to spike in summer — commonly above 140°F in a poorly ventilated Michigan attic in July — the underside of the shingles is thermally stressed from both directions: ambient weather from above and excessive attic heat from below. Shingles on airport-adjacent Romulus homes with blocked ventilation are often aging faster than their years suggest. When hail strikes an already-degraded shingle, the functional damage threshold is lower and the claim scope is broader.
  • FAA zone as a claim documentation factor For Romulus storm claims where blocked soffit ventilation from FAA noise programs contributed to shingle degradation, the inspection documentation needs to establish the ventilation history as part of the damage narrative. This is a factor that helps explain why aging is accelerated on these specific homes — relevant to supplement arguments where adjusters initially classify damage as cosmetic on shingles that appear older than the home's nominal age suggests.
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What Hail & Wind Damage Looks Like Across Romulus's Housing Mix

Romulus's housing stock spans a century — from downtown Craftsman builds to mid-century ranches to 1990s–2000s colonials near I-275. Storm damage presents differently across these eras.

  • Hail: circular granule loss — south and west slope concentration Michigan storm systems track from southwest to northeast. South and west-facing slopes on any Romulus home receive the densest hail impact. Metal component dimpling on gutters, ridge vents, and flashing is the clearest proxy evidence of a hail event — visible on close inspection regardless of shingle age or surface weathering condition.
  • Mat fracture on mid-century and FAA-degraded shingles Fiberglass mat fracture — the star-crack pattern beneath the asphalt detectable only by the flex test at shingle level — is more likely on Romulus's aging mid-century ranches and on airport-adjacent homes where ventilation-driven heat cycling has pre-stressed the mat. This is the functional damage finding that establishes a covered claim on an older roof.
  • Wind: open-terrain exposure on western and southern Romulus The open terrain in Romulus's larger-lot western and southern portions delivers storm wind with less buffering than in denser suburban areas. Sealant strip testing during a wind event is more severe on these properties. Partially lifted tabs on west-facing slopes in open-terrain Romulus neighborhoods should be treated with the same urgency as lakeshore communities — the sustained load was higher than for inland suburban rooflines.
  • Branch abrasion on Craftsman and farmhouse homes Romulus's downtown Craftsman and farmhouse-style builds have mature canopy and in some cases original board sheathing beneath the current roofing. Branch abrasion during a wind event on these homes can split board sheathing along grain lines — structural damage invisible from below and not detectable without roof-level access.

Roof Leak Water Is Category 3 — Why Blocked FAA Ventilation Makes It More Urgent in Romulus

The 48-Hour Stachybotrys Window Is Compressed in Attics With Pre-Existing Moisture Elevation

Under IICRC S500 water damage standards, roof leak water is Category 3: grossly contaminated. By the time storm water crosses a damaged shingle, wicks into decking, moves through insulation, and contacts attic framing, it carries biological matter, mold spores, particulate contamination, and commonly animal waste. Category 3 remediation is substantially more involved and expensive than a clean water event — and the distinction between primary storm damage (covered) and secondary damage from delayed response (disputed) is what turns a manageable roofing claim into a protracted insurance fight.

Stachybotrys chartarum — black mold — requires three conditions to initiate colony growth: cellulose-based material (wood framing, OSB sheathing, drywall), sustained moisture contact of 24 to 48 hours, and temperatures in the range Michigan attics routinely reach. In a standard properly ventilated attic, those conditions require the storm breach to supply the moisture. In a Romulus attic where FAA noise insulation has blocked the soffit intake — the scenario we find on a meaningful number of airport-adjacent homes in this city — elevated baseline humidity is already present before the storm arrives. The attic is partially pre-loaded with the moisture condition that Stachybotrys needs. Category 3 storm water entering that attic meets the colonization threshold faster, because it is joining elevated ambient moisture rather than introducing the moisture condition from zero. The 48-hour standard window may effectively be shorter on these specific properties.

The cost protection argument for prompt inspection is the same in Romulus as elsewhere — a $2,000 storm repair that is identified and tarped within 48 to 72 hours stays a $2,000 storm repair. The same breach left undetected for two to three weeks in a poorly ventilated Romulus attic with pre-existing moisture elevation can produce Stachybotrys colony growth that expands the scope to $15,000 or more in mold remediation, structural drying, and interior reconstruction. Insurance adjusters will distinguish between primary storm damage and secondary damage from delayed remediation — particularly in Romulus, where the ventilation history from FAA insulation programs is a documented factor that can be used to argue the secondary damage resulted from pre-existing conditions rather than from the storm event itself. A Protecht inspection that documents both the storm damage and the ventilation status immediately after the event establishes the correct causal narrative before that argument can be made.

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Warning Signs of Category 3 Water Infiltration

In Romulus homes with FAA-blocked soffit ventilation, these signs develop faster than in properly ventilated homes. Any of these after a storm means the inspection needs to happen today.

  • Musty or earthy odor in the attic or adjacent rooms Microbial volatile organic compounds (MVOCs) from active mold metabolism — appearing before any visible growth. On Romulus homes with blocked soffit ventilation, elevated baseline attic moisture means this odor can develop within 24 to 36 hours of a significant breach rather than the standard 48-to-72-hour window in a properly ventilated attic.
  • Dark staining on attic sheathing, rafters, or ridge board Discoloration directly below a breach zone — the Stachybotrys initiation window has already been met. On airport-adjacent Romulus homes where pre-existing attic moisture was elevated, this staining may appear more broadly from the entry point than on a comparably sized breach in a properly ventilated home.
  • Bubbling, staining, or soft spots in ceiling drywall Water has already saturated the insulation layer above and begun wicking into ceiling material. On Romulus homes where FAA blown-in insulation is present in the attic, clumped or saturated insulation above the ceiling stain is a specific finding that confirms the water infiltration pathway and the pre-existing ventilation condition.
  • Compressed or discolored blown-in insulation in the attic FAA noise insulation is typically cellulose or fiberglass blow-in material. Saturated blown-in insulation clumps, compresses, and loses its thermal performance — and actively supports mold growth on the organic debris trapped in the material. Visually distinct from batt insulation failure; identifiable on attic inspection.
  • Visible mold on attic wood surfaces Colony establishment has already occurred. Mold abatement is required before re-roofing. On Romulus homes where pre-existing elevated attic moisture has been present for years from blocked ventilation, mold colonies may be present in the attic before the storm breach — an important documentation finding for establishing the correct scope of storm-related vs. pre-existing damage.
  • Active water during or after storms on homes with aircraft vibration history On Romulus homes near active DTW approach corridors where vibration has accelerated flashing sealant fatigue, water may enter at flashing junctions during storm events even without direct shingle damage. Active water at wall-ceiling junctions or along pipe run areas indicates flashing failure — the breach point may not be visible on the field shingles.

What a Romulus Storm Inspection Covers That Others Don't

The Standard Assessment Plus the FAA Ventilation and Aircraft Vibration Variables Specific to This City

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The Standard Distance Problem

At 25 to 35 feet upward distance, hail impacts at the claim threshold are invisible. Wind sealant failure requires lifting the tab. Branch abrasion leaves no branch as evidence. On a Romulus ranch with a simple gable or hip roofline, the majority of the roof area is out of the homeowner's sightline from any ground position regardless of where they stand. The assessment from the driveway is not an assessment of the damage that drives claims — it is a confirmation that the most catastrophic possible outcome did not occur.

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The FAA Attic Assessment

On Romulus airport-adjacent properties, every storm inspection includes a specific attic assessment for FAA noise insulation soffit blockage. If the intake ventilation is blocked, that finding is documented as part of the inspection report — establishing both the current ventilation status and its relevance to the storm damage narrative. A blocked soffit on an airport-adjacent home is a pre-condition that belongs in the insurance documentation, not a discovery to be made weeks later when the mold remediation contractor arrives.

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The Aircraft Vibration Flashing Assessment

On homes near active DTW approach corridors, the secondary flashing and penetration assessment goes beyond the standard post-hail inspection scope. Every step flashing junction, chimney counter-flashing, pipe boot collar, and valley metal transition is assessed for micro-cracking and sealant fatigue consistent with prolonged vibration exposure. A flashing component at the failure edge from vibration-accelerated sealant fatigue that takes a hail impact during a storm event is a storm claim item — but only if the inspection identifies it and documents the condition in the claim record.

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What Protecht Documents

A Protecht Romulus storm inspection produces a written report covering: granule loss patterns across all slopes, metal component dimpling on gutters and ridge vents, lifted tab locations and sealant adhesion status, flashing and penetration condition with vibration-fatigue notation where applicable, decking condition beneath any breach, FAA ventilation intake status in the attic, and sheathing and moisture assessment where Category 3 infiltration is suspected. This is the documentation package that supports the claim at full scope and, on airport-adjacent properties, establishes the correct causal narrative before the adjuster can misattribute storm damage to pre-existing conditions.

Romulus Takes Downriver Storm Events on Open Terrain — and Airport-Adjacent Homes Are the Most Vulnerable When That Storm Arrives at an Attic Already Running Elevated Moisture.

Michigan's 2-Year Filing Window Starts at the Storm Date — Inspect Before It Closes

Romulus sits in the Wayne County storm track with 36 square miles of mixed terrain — open farmland in the west and south providing no windbreak, and the I-275 and I-94 corridors channeling storm systems through the city's northeastern quarter. When those systems arrive, they land on a housing stock that ranges from century-old farmhouses to 1990s colonials — and on a significant subset of homes where FAA noise insulation has been creating elevated attic moisture conditions for years before the storm breach triggers the Category 3 clock. The inspection is free. The FAA ventilation assessment is included. The 48-hour mold window is shorter on these specific properties than on any other home type in our service territory. Call today.

How the Storm Damage Insurance Claim Process Works in Romulus

Storm damage claims in Romulus have a specific documentation challenge that does not appear in other Wayne County communities: the FAA noise insulation variable. When a Wayne County adjuster assesses an airport-adjacent Romulus home and finds shingles that appear significantly more degraded than the home's nominal age suggests, the default interpretation is pre-existing wear — not a covered condition. The correct interpretation, for homes with documented FAA insulation soffit blockage, is that ventilation-driven accelerated shingle degradation is itself a consequence of a documented government program affecting this specific property. A Protecht inspection that identifies and documents the blocked soffit condition as part of the storm damage record establishes this narrative in the claim file before the adjuster forms an alternative interpretation.

Beyond the FAA variable, Romulus claims follow the standard process: homeowner files with the carrier, Protecht handles documentation and adjuster coordination, and supplement arguments are supported by photo documentation of granule loss patterns, mat fracture findings, and metal component dimpling evidence. The deductible is the homeowner's legal obligation under the policy — it is not waivable by any contractor under any framing. Deductible waiver offers from out-of-area storm chasers who follow hail events through Wayne County are insurance fraud and void the claim. Protecht does not make this offer and never will.

For covered storm damage, the homeowner's out-of-pocket cost is the deductible only. Romulus's housing mix — from modest mid-century ranches to larger farmhouse-style builds — means claim values vary significantly by home type. A Wayne Road ranch and a Pennsylvania Road farmhouse are very different claims even from the same storm event. The inspection establishes the scope; the documentation supports the adjuster conversation; and the claim gets paid at the correct scope with Protecht's coordination.

The Claim Process — What to Expect

Storm occursInspect within 48–72 hrs if possible
Protecht free inspectionWritten report + FAA ventilation assessment included
Homeowner files claim with carrierProtecht assists with full documentation package
Carrier assigns adjusterProtecht coordinates and can be present
Carrier issues initial estimateProtecht reviews — FAA ventilation narrative included
Supplement filed if neededAccelerated shingle degradation documented as covered
Claim approved — Wayne County permit pulledWork scheduled within 1–2 weeks of approval
Work completed + final documentationClaim closed · warranty issued

Storm Damage Patterns Across Romulus's 36 Square Miles

Romulus's wide geographic footprint means storm damage profiles vary more across the city than in any other community we serve. The downtown core along Goddard Road has century-old construction with mature canopy. The mid-century ranch corridors along Wayne Road, Eureka, and Northline carry the FAA noise zone overlap. The open western and southern portions have terrain exposure that amplifies wind. And the I-275 interchange area has 1990s–2000s colonials entering their first major storm claim cycle. Each zone has its own damage profile.

Downtown / Goddard Road Corridor Century-old Craftsman and farmhouse builds; mature canopy — branch-fall and abrasion risk highest in city; original board sheathing on some homes; chimney flashing density high
Wayne Road Corridor 1960s–1980s ranches; partial FAA noise zone overlap; standard mid-century storm profile plus soffit blockage assessment on airport-adjacent homes; pipe boot and chimney flashing most common findings
Eureka Road Neighborhoods 1950s–1970s ranches; FAA noise zone covers portions; soffit blockage on airport-adjacent homes accelerates both shingle degradation and post-storm mold risk; older sealant strips on most stock
Northline Road Area 1970s–1980s ranches and split-levels; deepest FAA noise zone overlap in the city; soffit ventilation assessment most critical here; aircraft vibration flashing assessment on homes nearest approach corridors
Middlebelt Corridor Wider range of home types from farmhouses to ranches; open terrain amplifies wind exposure; farmhouse-style builds on larger lots have longer branch fall distances from mature trees
Pennsylvania Road / South Romulus Larger-lot farmhouse and rural residential; open terrain — highest wind exposure in city; branch-fall risk from large mature trees on larger parcels; first or second major storm claim cycle
I-275 Interchange Area 1990s–2000s colonials; first major storm claim cycle; better original construction than mid-century stock; step flashing at garage walls and dormers primary storm secondary damage; outside main FAA noise zone
Airport-Adjacent Neighborhoods (Ecorse Rd / Wick Rd Corridors) Highest DTW proximity — aircraft vibration factor most significant; FAA soffit blockage most common; post-storm attic assessment is mandatory, not optional, on these properties
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The Romulus Storm Track

Romulus's storm exposure combines the standard Wayne County southwest-to-northeast track with the open terrain of a 36-square-mile city that lacks the windbreaks of denser suburban communities.

  • Primary storm approach — southwest to northeast via I-94 and I-275 corridors Michigan storm systems track northeast through Wayne County. The I-94 and I-275 corridors that border Romulus's northern and eastern edges channel these systems directly through the city. South and west-facing slopes on any Romulus home receive the densest hail impact from this directional track.
  • Open terrain in western and southern Romulus — elevated wind exposure Romulus's larger-lot western and southern areas along Pennsylvania Road and Middlebelt have open terrain that provides essentially no windbreak for approaching storm systems. Wind at the roofline on these properties is higher velocity than on comparably built homes in denser Wayne County communities. Sealant strip testing during a significant wind event is more severe here than in Downriver's established suburban neighborhoods.
  • FAA noise zone — storm damage risk compounded by pre-existing conditions The FAA noise abatement zone covers the central and eastern portions of Romulus. Homes in this zone with blocked soffit ventilation face post-storm Category 3 water risk that is more acute than anywhere else in our service territory, because the pre-existing elevated attic moisture condition compresses the Stachybotrys initiation timeline after a breach.
  • Mid-century housing stock — standard Downriver aging sealant vulnerability Romulus's 1950s–1980s ranch core has the same aging sealant strip vulnerability as Trenton, Flat Rock, and Woodhaven — 30-to-50-year-old adhesive bonds that may have no functional integrity before a wind event tests them. The FAA variable compounds this on airport-adjacent homes where ventilation-driven heat cycling has further degraded the shingle surface from above.

Serving All of Romulus — 20 Minutes Southeast via I-75

Protecht Exteriors serves all 36 square miles of Romulus (48174) — the downtown Goddard Road corridor, Wayne Road, Eureka Road, Northline, Middlebelt, Pennsylvania Road, the I-275 interchange area, and all airport-adjacent neighborhoods. Our Flat Rock office is approximately 20 minutes southeast via I-75 and Vreeland Road. No out-of-area surcharges, no scheduling delays.

Wayne County building permits are pulled on every Romulus job that requires one. We know the local building department, the Wayne County permit process, and the specific FAA noise zone considerations that affect Romulus inspections. Romulus is a regular part of our service territory — not a market we enter only when storm chasers move through.

Flat Rock Woodhaven Taylor Allen Park Southgate Inkster Wayne Westland Plymouth Trenton

Schedule Your Free Storm Damage Inspection in Romulus

A storm moved through Wayne County. If your Romulus home sits in the FAA noise abatement zone and has had attic insulation blown in under a noise-reduction program, your post-storm situation is more urgent than a standard storm inspection — because the soffit blockage that may be present in your attic means the 48-hour Stachybotrys window is shorter than on a properly ventilated home. The quarter-sized hail impacts are invisible from 30 feet below. The wind sealant on a 30-year-old ranch sealant strip looks undamaged from the driveway. The flashing sealant fatigue from years of aircraft vibration is not visible from any ground position. Michigan's 2-year filing window is running. The inspection is free. The FAA ventilation assessment is included.

Here's what happens after you submit:

  • We contact you within 1 business day to schedule your Romulus inspection
  • Certified inspector accesses all roof planes across all four exposures
  • All storm damage types documented: hail impacts, lifted tabs, branch abrasion, flashing displacement
  • FAA noise zone soffit ventilation assessment included on airport-adjacent properties
  • Aircraft vibration flashing fatigue assessment on homes near active approach corridors
  • Attic moisture and sheathing assessment for Category 3 infiltration where any breach is found
  • Written report with photos delivered same day or next business day
  • Insurance guidance and direct adjuster coordination available immediately
  • Emergency tarping arranged same day if active breach is confirmed

What Romulus Homeowners Say After the Storm

Real reviews from homeowners across Romulus and the broader Wayne County region.

Romulus, MI Storm Damage Roofing FAQs

How do I know if my Romulus roof was storm damaged if nothing looked wrong from the ground?

You can't assess storm damage from the ground — and on Romulus's mid-century ranches and airport-adjacent homes, the situation is more nuanced than a standard inspection. At 25 to 35 feet upward, a 1-inch hail impact is invisible. Wind sealant failure requires lifting the tab. On airport-adjacent homes where FAA soffit blockage has accelerated shingle degradation from elevated attic heat, the functional damage threshold on impact may be lower than a shingle's nominal age suggests. A trained inspector on the roof — with a FAA ventilation assessment in the attic — is the only reliable evaluation.

My Romulus home is near DTW — does that change my storm damage situation?

Yes — in two specific ways. First, if your home has had FAA noise insulation blown into the attic, check whether the soffit vents are still clear. Blocked soffit ventilation means elevated baseline attic moisture, which compresses the Stachybotrys timeline after a storm breach. Second, prolonged aircraft vibration can accelerate micro-cracking in aging flashing sealants and pipe boot collars on homes under active approach corridors — meaning flashing that looks intact may be closer to failure than its age alone suggests. Both of these factors are assessed on every airport-adjacent Romulus storm inspection Protecht performs.

A branch hit my Romulus roof during the storm — what should I expect?

Branch damage in Romulus depends on which neighborhood and which tree. Downtown Craftsman homes with mature canopy can sustain direct branch falls heavy enough to puncture original board sheathing along grain lines — structural damage invisible from below. Branch abrasion from a limb dragged across the surface during wind removes granules in linear patterns that look like ordinary weathering from 30 feet below. If a branch was in contact with your roof during the storm event, it belongs in the inspection scope regardless of whether it's still on the roof when you check afterward.

How long do I have to file a storm damage claim in Michigan?

Michigan policies generally provide a 2-year window from the storm date — not from when you notice the ceiling stain. On Romulus airport-adjacent homes where FAA soffit blockage has accelerated shingle aging, hail-damaged shingles may reach the water infiltration failure point faster than on a properly ventilated home. An inspection shortly after a significant storm event documents the cause and protects the filing position before the window starts closing.

What is Category 3 water and why does the FAA insulation issue make it more urgent in Romulus?

Under IICRC S500 standards, roof leak water is Category 3 — grossly contaminated. Stachybotrys chartarum (black mold) needs 24 to 48 hours of moisture contact with cellulose at Michigan attic temperatures to initiate colonization. On Romulus homes where FAA blown-in insulation has blocked soffit ventilation, elevated baseline attic humidity is already present before the storm breach. Category 3 storm water entering a pre-moisture-elevated attic reaches colonization conditions faster than in a properly ventilated home. On these specific properties, the 48-hour window is more urgent than the standard residential benchmark.

A Storm Hit Romulus — If Your Home Is in the FAA Noise Zone, the Post-Storm Situation Is More Urgent Than a Standard Inspection.

Quarter-sized hail impacts are invisible from 30 feet below. Wind sealant failure on a 30-year-old ranch looks fine from the driveway. Aircraft vibration-accelerated flashing fatigue produces no visible symptoms until the storm tests it. And if your soffit ventilation has been blocked by FAA noise insulation, the 48-hour Stachybotrys clock starts in an attic already running elevated moisture — shorter in practice than the standard residential timeline. Michigan's 2-year filing window is running from the storm date. Wayne County permits are pulled on every job. The FAA ventilation assessment is included on airport-adjacent properties. The inspection is free.

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