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Copper Roofs, Flashing, etc. |
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Gough SnoGuards on Matheson Supreme
Court Building |
Interlocking soldered "S" seamed
copper roof on church tower |
Matched cornice
with dentils, etc. rebuild after fire |
Some of the best work
is never seen |
Copperwork on Sullivan-Frank Lloyd
Wright building - Charnley House |
Copper roof on residence |
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ESE double-locked
standing seam copper on church sanctuary |
A lot of slope transitions here
- 18,000 # copper |
Adding copper expansion joint where
copper ripped apart |
ESE double locked standing seam
copper roof tied-into
slate |
Replaced copper covering after
truck damaged canopy |
Luke sitting above a skylight
above sanctuary replacing
copper deck & inlaid copper gutter |
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The boss gets his hands dirty
sometimes and teaches others to solder |
Zinc embossments spice-up copper
standing roof over row house entry |
Charnley House /
Sullivan Frank Lloyd Wright job - A view from 26 stories up |
Interlocking soldered "S" seamed
copper roof over a city hall |
Another copper bay window covering |
Simeon installing Gough SnoGuards
to help protect new
copper gutter torn-up by heavy snow movement |
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Rebuilding a municipal copper
cupola |
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ABOVE: Some Copper Roofs We Have Installed or Maintained Over The
Years.
OK, so most of our jobs include copper work. We think copper is
one of the best materials to use. As a flashing material and even roof
covering, it reduces maintenance. Copper does not rust like galvanized metal
and acquires a beautiful patina in 8 to 15 years. (A patina will
accelerate on lower slopes in urban areas.) It is used for flat and
standing-seam sloped roofs, mansards, cupolas, saddles, pan areas, valleys,
flashing, gutters, bay window coverings, skylights, etc. It's
malleability also lends it to beautiful ornamentation. Overall benefits
are: Longevity, Aesthetics & Function.
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