A Guide to Avoiding Building Envelope Failure (2024)

A building envelope system can fail for many reasons, though all produce the same results – a less energy-efficient, moisture-resistant, durable, and comfortable structure. Contractors can prevent many building envelope failures by using Barricade Building Wraps or Barricade Thermo-Brace S.I.B. Both products provide air and moisture resistance, durability, strength, and easy installation – all of which help prevent building envelope failure.

The building envelope, which includes the walls, roof, foundations, windows, and doors, protects the interior of a structure from the outside elements. A properly designed and constructed building envelope combines moisture management, structural integrity, temperature control, and air pressure boundaries into a cohesive system.

What Happens When a Building Envelope Fails?

  • Building envelope failure allows moisture to infiltrate the envelope during construction and occupancy. If the moisture becomes trapped, it can lead to mold. Mold can degrade the integrity of the envelope system, sometimes to the point of structural failure and eventual litigation.
  • Envelope failure increases heat gains and losses, which increases energy use and utility bills.
  • Building envelope failures can also degrade the aesthetics of a structure with glass and plywood delamination, warping, discoloration, and other material finish failures.

What are the Main Reasons a Building Envelope System Fails?

A Guide to Avoiding Building Envelope Failure (1)

1. Design Defects Can Lead to Building Envelope System Failure

A tight building envelope system requires precise design-build engineering expertise that includes a continuous air barrier and sealing of all joints and breaks. Unfortunately, the aesthetic design choices architects and designers make sometimes don’t provide adequate performance criteria for structural capacity, thermal movement, or water-resistance.

2. Not Applying the Whole-Building Approach to Design and Building

The whole-building system approach mandates that every building professional on the team understands all aspects that affect the building’s envelope. Contractors that coordinate and consult with the expert parties involved in the project considerably lessen the chances of building envelope failure.

3. Material Problems Can Cause a Building Envelope System to Fail

Building envelopes can fail when materials don’t achieve the published performance levels, often as a result of errors in the manufacturing, storing, or handling of the materials or components within the product. Contractors must inspect all building products before using to prevent envelope failure. For example, metal can fatigue, sealant adhesion can degrade, and laminated glass can delaminate.

Building envelope systems may also fail if subcontractors minimize costs by reducing the number, size, and weight of the number of different components vital to the structural integrity of a building.

4. Poor Workmanship – a Common Cause of Envelope Failure

Envelope failures due to poor workmanship grow during periods of skilled labor shortages. During times of labor shortages, contractors often must rely on inexperienced, unsupervised, and untrained employees to work on projects. Relying on these employees can lead to poor workmanship and installation of building envelope components that don’t comply with manufacturer specifications.

Unfortunately, the 2019 third-quarter commercial construction index found that 58 percent of U.S. contractors report a high level of concern over the lack of skilled workers.

5. Not Hiring a Qualified and Expert Building Envelope Inspector

Upon completion of a construction project, a skilled building envelope inspector must perform the final building envelope system inspection according to the 2018 International Energy Conservation Codes and local and state codes. An inaccurate final inspection may allow a building envelope system to fail.

6. Natural Disasters Can Damage the Envelope During and After Construction

Wind-driven rain, hurricane-force winds, and extreme temperature fluctuations (during and after construction) can damage an improperly designed building envelope, which makes it susceptible to deterioration or failure. To minimize the damage to the building envelope by natural disasters, contractors and building owners should perform detailed inspections and make necessary repairs after each severe weather event.

7. Avoid Envelope Failure by Conducting Daily Inspections During Construction

For the best defense against envelope failures, builders must conduct daily inspections of the building envelope during the construction process, and should immediately repair any detected problems in the building envelope system.

8. Prevent Envelope Failure After Construction with Routine Inspection and Maintenance

For the long-term durability of the building envelope system, building- and home-owners should routinely inspect their investment and immediately repair any problems found. Building owners should inspect several specific components of the envelope annually;

  • Drains, gutters, downspouts, and roof
  • Flashings and copings of the roof
  • Perimeters of the windows, doors and other wall penetrators
  • Building control and expansion joints
  • Driving and walking surfaces

How Barricade Products Help Builders Avoid Building Envelope System Failures

Builders looking for superior products that can help avoid building envelope system failures should consider Barricade® products:

Barricade Thermo-Brace Structural Insulation Board (S.I.B.)

  • The weather-resistant barrier on both sides of Thermo-Brace S.I.B. panels provides a wall system with a continuous air and moisture barrier.
  • Barricade Thermo-Brace S.I.B. combines superior strength and B.A.S.F. Neopor G.P.S. (Graphite Polystyrene) rigid insulation in one solution. The combination limits damage to the air and moisture barrier before, during, and after installation.

Barricade Wrap Plus

  • A proper application of Barricade Wrap Plus manages air and moisture infiltration within the building envelope. Also, the permeability of Barricade Wrap Plus (16 U.S. perms) permits moisture that enters the envelope to evaporate.
  • The durability and strength of Barricade Wrap Plus limit the occurrence of gaps and cracks in the air barrier before, during, and after installation.

When a building envelope fails, a building becomes less energy-efficient, moisture-resistant, durable, and comfortable. Building envelope systems can fail for numerous reasons: design flaws, not implementing the whole-building approach, material problems, poor workmanship, not hiring a qualified building envelope inspector, natural disasters, and not conducting routine inspections during and after construction.

Builders can avoid many of the threats to the building envelope by using Barricade Building Wraps or Barricade Thermo-Brace S.I.B. Both products provide air and moisture resistance, durability, strength, and ease of application – all of which help prevent building envelope failure.

A Guide to Avoiding Building Envelope Failure (2024)

FAQs

What are the ways to improve a building envelope? ›

Routinely inspect building for air and heat leakage using infrared cameras to identify thermal bridges and smoke blowers to locate air leaks. Inspect each envelope component from both the exterior and interior of the building. Establish a winter maintenance policy for window and through-wall air conditioners.

How can a building envelope fail? ›

Building envelopes can fail when materials don't achieve the published performance levels, often as a result of errors in the manufacturing, storing, or handling of the materials or components within the product. Contractors must inspect all building products before using to prevent envelope failure.

What are building envelope solutions? ›

Building envelope systems should perform two key functions for proper moisture management. First, they should create a continuous seal against water (to prevent bulk water intrusion) and air (to prevent air transported moisture). Sealing against air can also improve energy efficiency.

What are the 3 elements that must be controlled in the building envelope? ›

Movement of heat, air, and moisture must be controlled.

What is a highly efficient building envelope? ›

An energy-efficient building envelope refers to an effective boundary between the conditioned interior of the building and environment beyond it. This boundary includes: The heat-resistant materials in the façade of the building. Highly insulated windows and window seals.

What are the five elements of building envelope? ›

WHAT DEFINES A BUILDING ENVELOPE?
  • Floors (Below-Grade Systems)
  • Walls (Walling Systems)
  • Roofs (Roofing Systems)
  • Fenestration (Glazing Systems)
  • Shading Elements.
Jan 18, 2017

What is the problem with building envelope? ›

A building envelope failure can cause a roof collapse or other structural failures. It also might allow flooding in basem*nts that can lead to mold damage around above-ground walls. Mold, rust, and other water-intrusion risks can weaken a structure and enable the spread of pathogens.

What are building envelope principles? ›

Common measures of the effectiveness of a building envelope include physical protection from weather and climate (comfort), indoor air quality (hygiene and public health), durability and energy efficiency.

How do you test a building envelope? ›

The Testing Process

Massive multidirectional blowers can either pressurize or create a vacuum behind the specimen to measure air infiltration. Additionally, nozzles can spray water on the wall system and simulate significant rain and even hurricane events.

What is the envelope strategy? ›

The envelope budgeting system is a cash-based approach to budgeting. To follow the system, you label an envelope for each of your discretionary spending categories—the categories that don't have a fixed cost each month—and then fill the envelopes with the amount of spending cash you've allocated in your budget.

What are the three main functions of a building envelope? ›

The building envelope design targets the design of the building's foundation, walls, roof, windows, and doors. Various materials are used in building envelopes and their design to provide structural support for the building, climate control to its interior, and aesthetic view to the exterior depending on the culture.

What is building envelope optimization? ›

Building envelope optimization for minimizing heat gains and resultant energy demand involves optimization of building orientation, window-to-wall ratio (WWR), roof, wall, glass and shading devices.

What is building envelope protection? ›

A building envelope is the physical barrier between the external and internal environment of a structure. In general, it includes a series of components and systems that protect the interior space from precipitation, wind, temperature variations, humidity and ultraviolet rays.

What is an example of a building envelope? ›

The building envelope includes all the building components that separate the indoors from the outdoors. Building envelopes include the exterior walls, foundations, roof, windows and doors.

How to determine building envelope? ›

The envelope area, or measured part of the building, is the total area of all floors, walls and ceilings bordering the internal volume that is the subject of the pressure test. This includes walls and floors below external ground level.

How do you upgrade the building envelope? ›

Creating an efficient building envelope is simplest with a new build but it is possible to retrofit the envelope of an existing building to make it more efficient. Air sealing, adding extra insulation, and installing efficient doors and windows will all contribute to a more efficient building envelope.

What are the concerns of building envelope? ›

A failed building envelope can cause:
  • Reduced energy efficiency.
  • Reduced durability.
  • Reduced comfort.
  • Reduced moisture resistance.

What are the building envelope options? ›

Understanding The Types Of Building Envelopes
  • Singular Envelope. The Singular Envelope is the simplest form of the building envelope. ...
  • Double Envelope. The Double Envelope is a step up from the Singular Envelope in terms of energy efficiency. ...
  • Vented Envelope. ...
  • Pressure-Equalized Envelope. ...
  • Transparent Envelope.

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