Built-up roofing Charlotte NC — traditional 4-ply and 5-ply asphalt-and-felt BUR with mineral gravel ballast for Mecklenburg County heritage commercial, heavy-traffic mechanical roofs, and institutional buildings. Hot-asphalt or cold-applied install. NCLBGC licensed, 48-hour bids, and one of the few Charlotte-market contractors still certified for full-system BUR.
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Built-up roofing Charlotte NC work is, in 2026, a specialty service rather than a default — and that's exactly why it matters who you hire for it. Built-up roofing (alternating layers of asphalt and reinforcing felt, finished with gravel ballast or a cap sheet) was the dominant commercial flat-roof system from the 1890s through the 1980s, then lost share to lighter, cheaper single-ply. Across Mecklenburg County, most surviving BUR roofs are now 30–50 years old. For routine new construction we'd point a Charlotte owner toward TPO or EPDM. But three Charlotte-specific situations still call for genuine built-up roofing — and we're one of the few contractors in the metro still certified for full-system BUR installation rather than just patch-and-coat.
The first is heritage commercial. Mecklenburg County has a deep stock of National Register-listed and locally designated commercial buildings — Dilworth, Fourth Ward, Wesley Heights, Plaza Midwood, Wilmore, and the uptown commercial core. When one of these buildings carries an original built-up roof and the owner is pursuing the federal 20% historic rehabilitation tax credit, switching the roof to single-ply can disqualify the roof scope from the credit. On a large roof that's real money. The Charlotte Historic District Commission also reviews visible roof work in locally designated districts. For these buildings, BUR replacement is frequently the only tax-credit-compliant and review-acceptable path, and we coordinate the spec with the NC State Historic Preservation Office before tear-off.
The second is the heavy-traffic mechanical roof. Charlotte's industrial spine — the Steele Creek and Westinghouse Boulevard corridors south toward the airport, the I-85 manufacturing belt, the Stateline industrial market — is full of plants whose roofs see constant service: HVAC replacement cycles, process-equipment maintenance, solar arrays, crane-hoisted gear. A 4-ply or 5-ply BUR with gravel ballast shrugs off tool drops and foot traffic that would puncture a 60-mil single-ply membrane. For manufacturing facilities with high rooftop service intensity, we sometimes spec BUR specifically for that durability. The third is the institutional or municipal spec — university, county, and federal owners with standing BUR requirements on specific asset classes. When the spec says BUR, we install BUR. This page covers BUR specifically; for the full Charlotte system menu see our Charlotte commercial roofing hub.
On code and climate: Charlotte sits in roughly a 115 mph design wind zone (ASCE 7, NC Building Code, Risk Category II) — lower than coastal NC but high enough that perimeter-uplift and parapet flashing detail matters. BUR's mass works in its favor here; a gravel-ballasted 4-ply system at 6–8 psf resists uplift partly through dead weight. The Piedmont's flat terrain and easy kettle/crane access keep Charlotte BUR logistics costs below mountain or coastal work. We file NCLBGC license on every Mecklenburg permit and confirm the assembly against the code edition in force per the NC Department of Insurance.
Installed BUR cost runs $10–16 per square foot across Mecklenburg County for 4-ply with gravel ballast. Heritage and historic-district work trends higher for custom material matching and review coordination; industrial retrofit runs lower. Restoration coating of an aging BUR is a fraction of replacement.
A Charlotte BUR install is a multi-day phased operation that hinges on two things the field plies don't get credit for: structural verification up front (BUR's 6–10 psf dead load is unforgiving on older Mecklenburg decks), and fire-safety or adhesive-cure management during install. We follow the NRCA Commercial Low-Slope Manual and ARMA specifications. Lead time from contract to completion on a 25,000 sqft Charlotte BUR runs 3–4 weeks including tear-off, weather windows, and phased ply application.
Licensed roofing professional on-site within 48 hours of RFQ. Drone survey, moisture-probe cores, and critical structural weight analysis — BUR's 6–10 psf dead load must be verified against existing capacity before any spec is locked. Historic-district status checked (Dilworth, Fourth Ward, Wesley Heights, Plaza Midwood). Specification decision: 4-ply vs 5-ply, hot-asphalt vs cold-applied for occupancy, ballasted vs cap-sheet finish.
City of Charlotte / Mecklenburg County Code Enforcement permit pulled. NCLBGC license filed on the application. Where the building sits in a locally designated historic district, Charlotte Historic District Commission certificate-of-appropriateness review is coordinated, and on tax-credit projects the NC SHPO spec review is built into the timeline.
Existing roof removed in phases to maintain weather coverage. BUR tear-off is labor-intensive due to gravel ballast and multi-ply asphalt — roughly 10–15 tons of debris per 10,000 sqft, with dumpster rotation and disposal documentation coordinated with the owner. Deck inspected, fasteners verified, rot or delamination repaired. Insulation installed to R-25 minimum for NC climate zone 3A/4A.
Base sheet mechanically attached or set in hot asphalt / cold adhesive. Sequential plies (3 additional for 4-ply, 4 for 5-ply) laid with staggered, panel-width-offset laps for true multi-ply redundancy, each ply fully bonded to the one below. Hot-asphalt installs use kettle-heated asphalt mopped between plies under fire-watch; occupied-building work uses squeegee-applied cold adhesive.
Wall flashings, penetration details, drain assemblies, and parapet coverage built with modified-bitumen flashing membrane and galvanized counter-flashing to NRCA and ARMA specifications. On heavy-traffic industrial roofs, walkway-pad protection is added at service routes. BUR flashing quality is where long-term service life is made or lost — we spend proportionally more time here than on the field plies.
Mineral gravel ballast (3/8" to 3/4") set over a flood coat of asphalt at 400–500 lb per square; retention checked at wind-critical perimeters and corners for the Charlotte 115 mph design zone. Manufacturer NDL warranty registered (15–20 years typical). As-built drawings, product data, warranty certificates, and a maintenance schedule delivered.
The Charlotte BUR inventory clusters in three building cohorts, and each presents a different problem at tear-off. The first is the heritage commercial stock in and around the locally designated districts. Dilworth (Charlotte's first streetcar suburb), Fourth Ward, Wesley Heights, and the uptown commercial core hold masonry-structure buildings — some pre-1940 — whose flat and low-slope sections were originally built up with asphalt and felt. Many have cycled through reroofs, and on the oldest the deck itself may be original wood or early steel. For these, decking assessment is the longest-lead item: water-intrusion damage from prior roof failures, fastener loosening, and substrate degradation all surface during tear-off. Our bid carries an explicit decking-contingency line so owners aren't blindsided. Where the Charlotte Historic District Commission or a 20% tax-credit application is in play, the material spec — granular vs smooth surfacing, ballast color and size, counter-flashing profile — is reviewed before construction.
The second cohort is the 1960s–1980s industrial and warehouse stock along Charlotte's logistics spine. The Steele Creek and Westinghouse Boulevard corridors running south toward Charlotte Douglas International Airport, the I-85 manufacturing belt, and the Stateline industrial market on the SC line are dense with mid-century industrial buildings carrying heavy rooftop mechanical loading and dead-level decks prone to ponding. This is where BUR earns its keep as a service-traffic roof. Charlotte's logistics buildout has only intensified the demand on these roofs — Amazon's CLT2 fulfillment center at 10800 Old Dowd Road (roughly 387,000 sqft, robotics-equipped, near the airport cargo zone) and Averitt's pair of Mecklenburg warehouses totaling more than 500,000 sqft are newer single-ply builds, but the older industrial shells around them are exactly the cohort where gravel-ballasted BUR or a 4-ply recover still makes sense for tool-drop and foot-traffic durability. Routine industrial BUR here runs lower than heritage work because access is easy and the geometry is simple.
The third cohort is institutional and large-campus. UNC Charlotte — the UNC system's largest Charlotte presence on a roughly 1,000-acre neo-Georgian campus northeast of uptown, plus the Center City Building in the First Ward — carries the kind of standing-spec, capital-planned roof inventory where BUR sometimes survives as the required system on specific buildings. The same is true of county, municipal, and federal buildings across Mecklenburg. Charlotte's healthcare giants — Atrium Health's Carolinas Medical Center on the Dilworth/Midtown edge, where a 12-story, roughly 1.1-million-square-foot, $900M tower is under construction for completion around 2027, and Novant Health's Charlotte campuses including the Ballantyne/South Charlotte facility — are predominantly single-ply and metal on new construction, but their older ancillary and plant buildings still hold built-up roofs. Institutional capital cycles run 18–36 months, not 60-day RFQs, and occupied-building work on hospitals and schools is where cold-applied BUR matters most — no open-flame kettle near patient-area air intakes or occupied classrooms.
Across all three cohorts, the recurring decision is replace, recover, or restore. A sound aging BUR with remaining service life is often the best candidate on a Charlotte roof for a silicone restoration coating — strip the gravel, repair and prime the surface, and coat to lock in 12–15 more years at roughly a quarter of tear-off cost, which is why the restoration row in our cost table sits so far below the replacement rows. When the structure won't carry a new BUR's weight, or the building is lightweight metal-deck, we steer owners to single-ply or a commercial metal assembly rather than force a system the deck wasn't designed for. The full technical comparison — hot-asphalt vs cold-applied, 4-ply vs 5-ply, flashing options, restoration economics — lives on our built-up roofing pillar page; this page is the Charlotte-market view of when and where that system is the right call.
Heritage commercial restoration in Dilworth and Fourth Ward, heavy-traffic industrial roofs in the Steele Creek and Westinghouse Boulevard corridors, institutional and campus buildings, and silicone restoration of aging built-up roofs across the Charlotte metro.
Charlotte and Mecklenburg County carry a substantial stock of commercial buildings eligible for the federal 20% rehabilitation tax credit — the Historic Tax Credit available on certified rehabilitations of National Register-listed or contributing-district properties. For these buildings, roof-system choice is governed by the National Park Service Secretary's Standards for Rehabilitation, which require preservation of historic character and material-appropriate repair. On a building with an original built-up roof, switching to single-ply can single-handedly disqualify the roof scope from the 20% credit — on a $400K roof, that's up to $80K in foregone credit.
Locally, the Charlotte Historic District Commission reviews exterior alterations — including visible roof work — in the city's locally designated districts: Dilworth, Fourth Ward, Wesley Heights, Plaza Midwood, Wilmore, and Hermitage Court among them. Certificate-of-appropriateness review can dictate surfacing, ballast, and flashing-profile choices that don't apply to a generic industrial reroof. We coordinate with NC State Historic Preservation Office reviewers during the design phase so the spec qualifies before construction starts, and we source historic-spec BUR components — granular surfacing matching original, specific ballast size and color, period-appropriate counter-flashing — from specialty suppliers.
This is roofing as historic preservation: a narrow but real Charlotte market where full-system BUR capability is the value proposition, not a commodity. For owners weighing it against the alternatives, the honest answer is that single-ply is cheaper and lighter almost everywhere it's allowed — so the heritage BUR conversation only makes sense when the tax credit, the district review, or a standing institutional spec puts it on the table. When it does, having a contractor who can actually build a code-compliant, review-acceptable, NDL-warrantied multi-ply asphalt system in Mecklenburg County is the constraint that matters.
Heritage commercial in Dilworth or Fourth Ward, heavy-traffic industrial in Steele Creek, institutional spec work, or restoration of an aging BUR. NCLBGC licensed, one of the few Charlotte contractors still certified for full-system built-up roofing. 48-hour detailed bid.