Exposed roof areas
Identify openings caused by wind, hail, fire response, or impact.
Emergency Roof Tarping
Roof openings and active leaks can create additional damage. Temporary protection may help limit exposure while permanent repair scope is reviewed.
Restoration guidance
This page explains when tarping may be needed, how temporary protection helps, what not to do on a roof, and what documentation supports claim review.
Identify openings caused by wind, hail, fire response, or impact.
Explain temporary water-shedding without promising permanent repair.
Use a schematic to show secure perimeter thinking.
Document damage, materials, installed protection, and conditions.
What to do right now
What not to do
Roof tarping may be needed when shingles, decking, flashing, vents, skylights, or roof edges are damaged and rain or snow can enter the building.
A tarp is temporary weather protection. It does not replace roof repair, structural review, moisture inspection, or permanent rebuild when interior materials have been affected.
The roof opening, interior water path, temporary protection method, affected rooms, photos, and dates should be documented so emergency mitigation and later repair scope can be reviewed separately.
Timeline
First call: report active fire, water, storm, roof, or security concerns.
Stabilization: protect openings, remove standing water when safe, and reduce further exposure.
Documentation: collect photos, room notes, moisture readings, and emergency summaries.
Scope review: separate immediate mitigation from rebuild and restoration planning.
Project Gallery Ready
These slots are prepared with descriptive alt-text guidance and do not use fake before-and-after claims.
Questions and Answers
No. Avoid roof access during unsafe conditions, after storms, or when structural damage may exist. Call for guidance and prioritize life safety.
Fire and Storm Restoration
Emergency stabilization, standards-informed mitigation, insurance-ready documentation, and restoration scope support for Chicagoland properties.