You measure the roof to get the square feet. There are 100 square feet in a square. On a straight single peak roof it's height times length on one side and double it. Then divide the total square feet by 100. This final number will give you the number of squares you have.
If the roof is a flat, commercial roof, it is the same (100 sq. ft = 1 SQ). However, if it is a metal panel commercial roof, you need to add in "stretch factor" or the added amount of square footage if the panels were to be stretched flat. A good estimate for this is: If the ribs on the metal panel are 1" tall, add 10% to your square footage; if the ribs are 1.5" tall, add 15% to your total square footage. So, if you have a metal roof that is an R-panel (_/-\_), the ribs are 1.5" tall and the roof is 100 SQ (or 10,000 sq ft), take 10,000 sq ft + 15% (1500) = 11,500 sq ft (115 Squares).
a roofing square is 100 sf. There are formulas out there that allow you to use the pitch and outer dimensions of the roof to figure out the number of squares. If not, calculate the square footage and divide by 100 - that's the number of squares you have...
943 sq ft 9 and 1/2 squares of roofing
To find the sq. ft of a roof you have to measure the length and the width and multiply those figures together. Then you divide that figure by 100 and it will tell you how many squares of shingles it will take to cover it.
12
Every roof will be different depending on the size of the roof, the materials needed , labor and if the house is one or two story. A few materials that you will need to check pricing for is felt, different types of shingles, nails, flashing, drip edge, pipe jacks, and decking. You can call a local supplier with those details and they will be able to give you a ball park figure.
a roofing square is 100 sf. There are formulas out there that allow you to use the pitch and outer dimensions of the roof to figure out the number of squares. If not, calculate the square footage and divide by 100 - that's the number of squares you have...
A 30ft X 30ft roof would be 9 squares
165 + 5% or so for mistakes
Roofing shingles are measured in "squares". One square is 100 square feet. *ASSUMING YOUR ROOF IS FLAT OR NEARLY FLAT* 16' x 80' = 1280 square feet. You'll need 12.8 (or 13) squares of roofing shingles. The majority of roofing shingle bundles are 3 bundles per square. 13 squares times 3 bundles per square = 39 bundles (minimum). Good luck!
You can figure it out with a roof framing book if you know the span and pitch of the roof. Its usually quicker to climb up there with a tape.
The roofing industry speaks of a "square" as meaning 100 square feet. So, if your contractor says your roof is about 9 squares, he means it will require about 900 square feet of materials in order to cover the surface area of your roof.
943 sq ft 9 and 1/2 squares of roofing
Check the roof for asbestos marking or the packing that it came in. If you are still trying to figure out if there is asbestos, call the manufacturer and they can give you details.
Figure width X 1/2 length of the triangle to get Square feet.
form_title= Aluminum Roofing form_header= Repair or install a new aluminum roof. How old is your roof?*= _[50] Do you need the roof repaired? Is the roof leaking?*= () Yes () No
flat roofing is simply a flat roof structure, ie their is no slope in the roof, it is completely flat. For that reason it has to be super waterproof has rain will collect and stay on the roof.
The various forms of roofing include the Mansard roof, Gambrel, Saltbox, hip roof, and many others.