EPDM · TPO · Modified Bitumen · Standing Seam · Corrugated Metal · R-30 Code Compliant · City of Romulus
Protecht Exteriors handles all five major commercial roofing systems — EPDM, TPO, modified bitumen, standing seam metal, and corrugated metal — and specifies the correct one for each building rather than defaulting to whatever is fastest to install. Romulus has one of the most commercially diverse building inventories in the service territory — driven by its position at the intersection of I-94, I-275, and I-75, and its adjacency to Detroit Metropolitan Airport. The commercial stock includes large logistics and distribution warehousing along the I-94 and I-275 corridors, aviation-support facilities and cargo buildings near DTW, automotive-related manufacturing and supply, mid-size strip commercial along Wayne Road and Eureka Road, and older neighborhood commercial downtown. Roof footprints in Romulus tend to be larger than in Downriver communities — the warehouse and logistics buildings routinely exceed 50,000 to 200,000+ square feet. EPDM is the dominant system on large Romulus roofs for economics; TPO on mid-size commercial. Every commercial replacement in Romulus is built on two staggered layers of 3-inch polyiso insulation meeting Michigan's R-30 Climate Zone 5 code requirement, with a cover board, all flashings, and permits pulled through City of Romulus. Our office is 20 minutes southeast of our Flat Rock office via I-75 and Vreeland Road. The assessment is free and the written scope is delivered before any commitment is required.
Climate Zone 5 · ASHRAE 90.1-2022 · Two Layers Polyiso · Staggered Joints · Cover Board Required
Michigan adopted the 2021 IBC effective January 1, 2024, and references ASHRAE 90.1-2022 for commercial energy compliance. Southeast Michigan — including Romulus — is Climate Zone 5 under the IECC and ASHRAE classification system. For insulation installed entirely above the roof deck, the minimum R-value in Climate Zone 5 is R-30. This is the code floor for low-slope commercial roofs — not a recommendation, but the legal minimum. A commercial roof replacement that tears off to the structural deck is treated as an alteration under ASHRAE 90.1-2022 and must meet the R-30 minimum. Most of Romulus's older commercial buildings were originally built with R-12 to R-18 insulation — well below that floor.
Polyisocyanurate — polyiso or ISO board — is the dominant insulation material for low-slope commercial roofing in Michigan because it delivers the highest R-value per inch of any rigid board insulation: approximately R-6.0 to R-6.5 per inch on a Long Term Thermal Resistance (LTTR) basis. A single 3-inch polyiso board delivers approximately R-18 to R-19.5. Two 3-inch boards installed in staggered layers deliver approximately R-36 to R-39 — comfortably above the R-30 code minimum and approaching the higher performance targets that future-proof the building against tightening standards. This is why Protecht specifies two staggered layers of 3-inch polyiso as the standard above-deck assembly on every Romulus commercial replacement.
The reason for two layers rather than a single thick board is thermal bridging. A single polyiso board has an uninterrupted joint at every board edge — a thermal weak point that reduces the installed R-value below the label R-value in the field. Two layers installed perpendicular with joints offset eliminate this bridge: every joint in the bottom layer is covered by solid board in the top layer. The National Roofing Contractors Association's 2023 manual endorses multi-layer installation as standard practice. Staggered joints also improve dimensional stability of the insulation system over the membrane's service life.
Above the polyiso layers, a half-inch high-density cover board provides the finished substrate for the membrane. Cover boards protect the soft polyiso from point loads during installation and service, improve hail resistance of the system, enhance membrane adhesion, and add approximately R-2.5 to the assembly. ASHRAE 90.1-2022 also requires a continuous air barrier in commercial building envelopes — in a low-slope roof assembly, this is achieved through taped insulation joints and the self-adhered underlayment or air barrier membrane beneath the insulation, with all joints, penetrations, and roof-to-wall transitions detailed for air leakage control.
Every commercial replacement Protecht installs in Romulus uses this above-deck assembly as the standard starting point. Variations are specified for individual building conditions.
Not every commercial roofing job triggers the full R-30 requirement. Here's the distinction that determines scope.
No Universal Best System — the Correct Specification Depends on Building Type, Use, Budget, and Performance Goals
Protecht installs all five major commercial roofing systems and does not default to one regardless of fit. The system specification starts with the building: roof size and geometry, occupancy type, budget, energy performance goals, drainage condition, and expected service life. The written scope includes the system recommendation with the specific rationale for why that system was selected for your building.
Single-ply thermoplastic membrane with heat-welded seams — the strongest seam type in commercial roofing. White reflective surface reduces cooling loads. 40% of installed U.S. commercial roofing. Current-generation 60-mil TPO from major manufacturers (Firestone, Carlisle, GAF, Johns Manville) is a fundamentally more reliable product than the early-generation TPO failures of the 1990s.
Synthetic rubber membrane — the most field-tested commercial roofing system on the planet, with installations from the 1970s still in service. Roll widths up to 50 feet minimize seams on large simple roofs. Proven cold-weather flexibility for Michigan's full temperature range. The seam maintenance program is the primary ownership responsibility.
Two-ply SBS-modified asphalt system — evolved from traditional BUR with rubber polymer modification for cold-climate flexibility. Multiple independent layers mean penetration of all layers is required before water reaches the deck. Granular cap sheet surface resists hail impact and documents storm events. Torch-applied SBS is the standard Michigan specification — APP less suitable for cold-climate flexibility.
Vertical panels with concealed clips — fasteners never penetrate the roof surface. No exposed fastener gaskets means no gasket failure mode that drives corrugated metal maintenance costs. Panels float on clips, accommodating Michigan's 150°F seasonal temperature swing without panel stress. Ideal solar substrate — panels clamp directly to raised seams without drilling. 24-gauge Galvalume standard for Michigan commercial work.
Exposed fastener panels — lowest-cost metal roofing. The honest trade-off: thousands of screws penetrate the roof surface, and each gasket is a potential leak point as it ages from UV exposure and thermal cycling. Regular inspection every 3 to 5 years to identify loose or failed fasteners is not optional maintenance — it is what keeps the system performing. Appropriate where first cost dominates and the exposed fastener trade-off is acceptable.
Core Cuts · Structural Deck Condition · Drainage Survey · Penetration Inventory · Written Scope Before Commitment
A commercial proposal without a physical survey is a guess. Protecht conducts a full visual inspection of all roof planes and parapets, photographic documentation of all conditions found, structural deck assessment for rust and delamination, drainage adequacy evaluation to identify ponding zones requiring tapered insulation, and a complete inventory of all penetrations, HVAC curbs, and equipment requiring re-flashing. Everything found during the survey is documented before the written scope is issued. No surprises on the job.
The most important diagnostic step on any commercial replacement or recover evaluation. Protecht cuts cores through the existing assembly at multiple representative locations to verify insulation moisture content, confirm existing insulation R-value, and assess deck condition beneath the insulation. Wet insulation found during assessment is removed and replaced — never buried under a new membrane. Wet insulation trapped under a new roof corrodes steel decks and degrades insulation R-value over time. Core cuts determine whether the job is a recover or full replacement.
After the survey, Protecht produces a written scope that includes: recommended system type with rationale specific to your Romulus building; insulation assembly specification meeting R-30 Climate Zone 5 minimum; all flashing and edge metal details; drainage improvements required; deck repair scope identified during survey; and specific material specifications by manufacturer and product. This document is the basis for the written estimate. No verbal commitments, no vague allowances, no scope surprises at the invoice.
Commercial permits are pulled before any work begins. The permit application documents the insulation R-value, system type, and code compliance path for City of Romulus. After completion, Protecht provides the signed-off permit, manufacturer warranty documentation (with NDL warranty registration where applicable), a completion report with as-built photos, and required building envelope documentation for the owner's records. A Romulus commercial building with documented code-compliant roofing in its file is a different asset than one without.
Large Romulus warehouse and logistics buildings along I-94 and near DTW are amon...
Romulus has one of the most commercially diverse building inventories in the service territory — driven by its position at the intersection of I-94, I-275, and I-75, and its adjacency to Detroit Metropolitan Airport. The commercial stock includes large logistics and distribution warehousing along the I-94 and I-275 corridors, aviation-support facilities and cargo buildings near DTW, automotive-related manufacturing and supply, mid-size strip commercial along Wayne Road and Eureka Road, and older neighborhood commercial downtown. Roof footprints in Romulus tend to be larger than in Downriver communities — the warehouse and logistics buildings routinely exceed 50,000 to 200,000+ square feet. EPDM is the dominant system on large Romulus roofs for economics; TPO on mid-size commercial.
Large Romulus warehouse and logistics buildings along I-94 and near DTW are among the strongest EPDM applications in the service territory — wide-roll EPDM minimizes seams on massive simple flat roofs, and the economics are compelling at scale. Mid-size strip commercial along Wayne Road and Eureka Road is TPO. Aviation-support buildings may have specific manufacturer or FM Global insurance requirements that govern system selection — Protecht confirms these before specifying. Protecht's commercial assessments in Romulus routinely find: insulation below the R-30 code minimum on pre-2000 buildings (R-12 to R-18 is common on 1970s and 1980s commercial stock); wet insulation from years of slow seam or penetration leaks that a new membrane would simply bury without core cut verification; corroded steel deck beneath older BUR systems that has been hidden by the existing membrane; and drainage deficiencies where decades of thermal cycling and settling have created ponding zones that accelerate membrane aging. None of these conditions are unusual in Romulus's commercial inventory — they are the reasons the assessment and core cut process exists before any scope is committed.
The commercial roofing decision for a Romulus building owner comes down to the right system, specified correctly for the building, installed to code, and backed by documentation that protects the asset. Protecht does not have a preferred system that gets recommended regardless of fit. The written scope from the assessment is the starting point — and it is produced before any commitment is required.
These are the most common findings on Romulus commercial roof assessments — conditions that affect system selection, scope, and cost that cannot be identified without a physical inspection and core cuts.
$5.50 to $14.00 per square foot installed; a 10,000 SF warehouse near DTW typically runs $55,000 to $95,000 fully installed; a 3,000 SF strip commercial building runs $20,000 to $42,000. The primary cost drivers are system type, existing deck condition, insulation upgrade scope required to reach R-30, number of mechanical penetrations and HVAC curbs requiring re-flashing, drainage improvement scope, and parapet and edge metal complexity.
The insulation upgrade from a pre-code R-12 to R-18 assembly to the R-30 minimum is not optional on a full tear-off replacement — it is a code requirement. But it is also a genuine performance investment. The energy cost savings from R-30 versus R-12 insulation in a Climate Zone 5 commercial building that conditions space year-round are meaningful over a 25-year membrane service life. The annual energy savings partly offset the insulation material cost over time, particularly on larger heated and cooled buildings.
Most Romulus commercial replacements complete in 2 to 5 business days for mid-size buildings; larger industrial roofs may require 1 to 2 weeks. Permits are pulled before any work begins. Work can be phased on occupied buildings to limit disruption to tenants. Protecht coordinates access and staging around business operations where required. A complete written schedule is provided before mobilization.
These ranges are representative. The only accurate number is a written scope after physical assessment and core cuts. Protecht does not quote commercial roofing over the phone.
Protecht Exteriors serves all commercial properties in Romulus (48174) for assessment, replacement, repair, and storm damage response. Our Flat Rock office is 20 minutes southeast of our Flat Rock office via I-75 and Vreeland Road. Commercial assessments are scheduled within 1 to 3 business days of request. All permits are filed with City of Romulus.
Protecht holds manufacturer certifications supporting NDL warranty issuance on qualifying commercial installations. Commercial roofing experience spans all building types in the Romulus market — from small neighborhood retail to large industrial — with 25-plus years in Southeast Michigan.
A commercial replacement decision measured in tens of thousands of dollars starts with an honest physical assessment — not a phone quote. Protecht conducts a written survey of the existing roof system, core cuts to verify insulation condition and deck status, a full drainage evaluation, and a complete penetration inventory. A written scope with system recommendation is delivered before any commitment is required. If the assessment reveals conditions that affect cost — corroded deck, wet insulation, drainage deficiencies — they are in the scope document before work begins, not discovered mid-job.
Here's what happens after you submit:
Real reviews from commercial and residential customers across Romulus and the region.
Yes. Romulus is in Wayne County, Climate Zone 5 under IECC/ASHRAE. Michigan's ASHRAE 90.1-2022 requires R-30 minimum for above-deck insulation on low-slope commercial roofs in Climate Zone 5. Full replacement triggers this requirement. Many of Romulus's older commercial buildings along Wayne Road and Eureka Road were built with R-12 to R-18 insulation. On large Romulus warehouse roofs, the insulation upgrade is a meaningful cost line — but one that pays back over time in reduced energy costs on buildings that may be conditioning 50,000 to 200,000 square feet. Protecht's standard assembly installs two staggered layers of 3-inch polyiso (approximately R-37 to R-39) plus cover board on every replacement.
Romulus splits cleanly by building size and type. Large warehouse and logistics buildings along I-94 and near DTW are strong EPDM applications — wide-roll format minimizes seams on 50,000 to 200,000 SF roofs, EPDM cold-climate flexibility is proven, and the first-cost economics at that scale are compelling. Mid-size strip commercial along Wayne Road and Eureka Road is a TPO specification — white membrane, heat-welded seams, energy savings for occupied conditioned space. Aviation-support buildings near DTW may have FM Global or airline tenant insurance requirements that specify the system — Protecht confirms these before issuing a recommendation. Modified bitumen for high-penetration-density buildings. The written assessment produces the specific answer for your building.
Commercial replacement timelines in Romulus vary more than in any other city in the service territory because of the wide range of building sizes. A 3,000 SF strip commercial building on Wayne Road completes in 2 to 3 days. A 50,000 SF warehouse near DTW may take 1 to 2 weeks. City of Romulus permits typically issue within 3 to 7 business days. DTW-adjacent projects require awareness of FAA airspace near certain facilities — Protecht coordinates as required.
Commercial replacement in Romulus ranges widely by building size. A 10,000 SF warehouse near DTW typically runs $55,000 to $95,000 fully installed; a 3,000 SF strip commercial building runs $20,000 to $42,000. Per-square-foot cost is $5.50 to $14.00 depending on system, deck condition, and scope. Large EPDM installations on simple warehouse roofs run lower per-SF than complex multi-penetration TPO jobs. Deck corrosion, drainage deficiencies requiring tapered insulation, and high penetration counts all increase scope. The written assessment is the only accurate number.
Yes. The City of Romulus requires a commercial building permit for roof replacement. Protecht handles all City of Romulus permit filings and prepares documentation for insulation R-value and system compliance. For DTW-adjacent facilities with specific FAA or airline tenant requirements, Protecht coordinates with those requirements before the permit application is filed. Signed-off permit and manufacturer warranty documentation are delivered at job completion.
Protecht installs all five major commercial roofing systems, specifies the right one for each building, pulls all City of Romulus permits, installs two staggered layers of 3-inch polyiso to meet Michigan's R-30 Climate Zone 5 requirement, and delivers manufacturer NDL warranty documentation at completion. A commercial roof replacement is a 20-to-40-year decision. It deserves a written scope, a physical survey with core cuts, and a system recommendation chosen for your building. The assessment is free. The written scope is yours before any commitment.

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