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Commercial Roof Coating Albion: Restoration and Cost

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The first time a Albion property manager called Albion Commercial Roofing about a roof coating, he was standing on a 22,000 square foot warehouse with three active leaks and a quote for full tear off that made his eyes water. He did not need a sales pitch. He needed someone to climb up, look honestly at the membrane, and tell him whether his roof had ten years left in it or two. That is the call we get most often on commercial coatings, and it is the call this guide is built around.

Across Albion, we have walked hundreds of flat and low slope roofs that looked finished from the parking lot but still had solid bones underneath. Coating is not magic. It will not save a roof that is already saturated, and it will not seal seams that have torn loose from the deck. But on the right substrate, applied at the right time, a quality silicone or acrylic system can add 10 to 15 years of service for roughly a third of replacement cost. The stories below are real field experiences, names changed, that show how the decision actually plays out, what the inspection reveals, where the dollars go, and what your roof looks like when our crew rolls off the property.

The Warehouse Owner Who Almost Replaced a Roof That Did Not Need It

That first property manager, we will call him Dan, had a 14 year old TPO roof. A competitor told him the whole thing was shot. When our team pulled core samples in four corners and the center, only one had wet insulation underneath. The rest of the deck was dry, the membrane was chalked but intact, and the seams were holding. We patched the wet section, replaced about 180 square feet of insulation, and quoted a silicone coating across the full field. His replacement bid had been around $8.50 per square foot. Our restoration came in just under $3.10. He kept his roof, kept his tenants open, and signed a five year maintenance plan. If your building tells a similar story, our commercial roof inspections are the honest starting point.

What stuck with Dan was the core sample part. He told us later that no other contractor had offered to actually cut the membrane and look. They had walked the roof, taken pictures from a drone, and quoted a tear off. The Albion Commercial Roofing approach with him was simple. We assume the roof is restorable until the deck tells us otherwise. That mindset has saved Albion owners real money on dozens of warehouses, flex spaces, and light industrial buildings over the last few seasons.

The Restaurant Group That Waited Too Long

Not every story ends with a coating. A Albion restaurant group called us in August about ponding water and a stained ceiling tile over the prep line. The EPDM was 19 years old, the insulation was wet across nearly 40 percent of the field, and the deck showed rust streaks at the drains. Coating that roof would have been throwing good money after bad. We told them directly, the way we tell every customer, that restoration was not the right call. They moved forward with commercial roof replacement instead, and we coordinated a phased install so the kitchen never shut down. The lesson from that job is simple. Coating works when the substrate is sound. Once moisture is trapped under the membrane, you are sealing in the problem, not solving it.

There was a second lesson buried in that project. The owner had been quoted a coating job two years earlier by a traveling crew, and he wished he had said yes. Two years of additional saturation pushed the insulation past the point where any restoration product could help. If you are sitting on chalked membrane and minor seam fatigue right now, that is the window. Wait through another wet season and the conversation changes from coating to tear off, and the budget triples.

The Office Park That Got It Right the First Time

The cleanest restoration job we did last year was a three building office park where the owner called us early. The roofs were 12 years old, no leaks yet, just some chalking and minor seam stress. We power washed, reinforced 340 linear feet of seams with fabric and base coat, primed the field, and rolled a silicone topcoat at 22 wet mils across all three buildings. Total cost worked out to around $2.90 per square foot. Compared to replacing all three roofs in five years at projected pricing, the owner saved well into six figures and kept the original membrane working underneath. That is the version of this story we want every Albion owner to get to write.

Why Silicone Keeps Winning Local Bids

If you are wondering which coating chemistry to ask about, here is what our Albion estimates keep landing on, and why.

  • Silicone handles ponding water better than acrylic, which matters on flat roofs with sluggish drains.
  • Acrylic costs less up front and looks great year one, but it softens under standing water and tends to need recoating sooner.
  • Silicone reflectivity stays high through Indiana summers, which we see translate into measurable cooling load reductions on metal buildings.
  • Most silicone systems carry 10 to 15 year manufacturer warranties when applied at correct mil thickness, usually 20 to 25 wet mils.
  • Silicone does not require a recoat to maintain warranty in most cases, which keeps your long term maintenance budget predictable.

What the Numbers Actually Look Like in Albion

One question we hear on almost every estimate is, how much per square foot. The honest answer depends on the existing roof, the coating system, and how much prep the membrane needs. Acrylic on a clean TPO field runs in the $1.80 to $2.75 range. Silicone on EPDM lands closer to $2.50 to $3.75. Silicone on metal, where we are also chasing fastener heads and rust spots, comes in around $2.75 to $4.25 per square foot. A full tear off and replacement on the same buildings would be quoted between $7.50 and $12 per square foot depending on insulation thickness and deck type. Those ranges reflect typical Central Indiana conditions, prep level, and access. Tight ponding repair and seam reinforcement push the higher end of every number above.

The Self Storage Facility and the Hail Surprise

A self storage owner in Albion called after a spring hail event. He thought he needed a coating because the membrane looked beaten up. When we walked the roof, the bigger issue was bruised insulation and two split seams. We do not just sell what we showed up to sell. We tarped the active leak the day of inspection, filed photos that supported his carrier conversation, and then split the work. The damaged sections went through the storm claim as repair, and the rest of the field got a silicone coating six weeks later, paid out of pocket. If you are mid claim, our notes on the commercial roof insurance claim process walks through what carriers actually look for.

That split scope ended up saving him close to $14,000 versus a single all cash bid. Adjusters care about what is storm related and what is wear and tear, and a coating contractor who can document the difference with dated photos and core samples gives the owner a much stronger file. We have walked enough roofs with adjusters now that we know which language and which images move a claim forward.

How Albion Commercial Roofing Decides What Your Roof Actually Needs

Every restoration conversation we have in Albion starts the same way. A phone call where we ask about age, leak history, and what you are seeing from inside the building. Severity gets assessed right there, before we ever climb a ladder. If there is an active leak, tarping and dry in move to the top of the list and the inspection gets scheduled fast behind it. From there, we pull cores, map moisture, and put a written recommendation in your hands. Sometimes the answer is a full coating system. Sometimes it is a targeted repair and a recheck next spring. Sometimes, like the restaurant group, it is replacement. The promise from Albion Commercial Roofing is not that coating is always the answer. The promise is that the recommendation matches what your roof is actually telling us.

Talk to a Crew That Will Tell You the Truth

Coating is the right answer for some Albion roofs and the wrong answer for others. The only way to know which one you have is a real inspection with core samples, moisture scans, and seam testing, not a guess from the ground. Albion Commercial Roofing offers free inspections and written estimates, and if your roof needs replacement instead of restoration, we will tell you directly. Call when you are ready, and we will get someone on your roof and a clear plan in your hands.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a commercial roof coating last in Albion?

A properly installed silicone system over a sound substrate typically lasts 15 to 20 years in Albion, with a recoat extending life another decade. Acrylic systems usually run 10 to 15 years. Lifespan depends heavily on prep quality and ongoing maintenance.

Can Albion Commercial Roofing coat over an existing coating?

Sometimes. We test adhesion and check for chalking, dirt, and degraded areas first. If the existing coating is sound and compatible, a recoat is straightforward. If it is failing, removal or a different approach may be needed, and we will explain why before quoting.

Will a roof coating stop active leaks immediately?

Not by itself. Active leaks need to be located, the wet insulation removed, and the source repaired before coating goes on. Coating over a leaking roof traps moisture and leads to premature failure. We handle the repairs first, then apply the system.

Does roof coating qualify as a capital improvement or a repair?

That depends on scope and your accountant, but many Albion building owners treat a full restoration coating as a capital improvement because it extends useful life by a decade or more. We provide detailed documentation that supports either classification.

What is the best time of year to coat a roof in Albion?

Late spring through early fall is ideal because most coatings need dry conditions and temperatures above roughly 50 degrees for proper cure. We monitor forecasts closely and will reschedule application if weather threatens the cure window rather than risk a compromised installation.