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Commercial roofing for Houston hotels, resorts, and restaurant groups. Low-disruption reroofing, leak repair, and storm-ready systems that keep doors open.

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  • Roofing for properties that never get a slow night
  • A hotel sells the room above the leak. A restaurant sells the dining room under the failing roof. For hospitality operators, a roof problem is not just a maintenance line item, it is a guest experience problem, a review problem, and a revenue problem all at once. We work with hotel groups, restaurant operators, event venues, and multi-property hospitality owners across Greater Houston to keep roofs sound without taking rooms or covers out of service.
  • Houston's hospitality footprint is large and varied: convention hotels downtown serving the George R. Brown crowd, full-service properties and dining around the Galleria and Uptown, business-traveler hotels lining the Energy Corridor and Westchase, and restaurant groups spread across every commercial district in the metro. The roofs range from low-slope single-ply over a hotel tower's back-of-house and ballroom to small built-up and modified roofs over freestanding restaurants. Each one demands a different approach, and each one has guests or diners directly underneath.
  • What makes hospitality roofs fail
  • Hospitality buildings have a roof profile of their own. The problems we see most often trace back to how these properties operate.
  • Kitchen exhaust and grease. Restaurants and hotel kitchens push grease-laden exhaust onto the roof. Over time grease degrades many membranes and fouls drains. The area around the kitchen exhaust fan is frequently the first part of a hospitality roof to go.
  • Heavy rooftop equipment. Hotels carry significant HVAC loads, makeup-air units, pool dehumidification, and laundry exhaust. Every unit is a cluster of penetrations and curbs, and every service visit by a mechanical contractor adds foot traffic that wears the membrane.
  • Amenity decks and pools. Rooftop bars, pool decks, and terraces put waterproofing under constant standing water, traffic, and chemical exposure. These assemblies fail in ways a plain field membrane never does.
  • Deferred maintenance. Hospitality budgets get pulled toward guest-facing renovations. Roofs get patched rather than maintained until a leak finally reaches a guest room ceiling.

Doing the work without disrupting guests

The hard part of a hotel reroof is rarely the roofing. It is doing it over a building full of paying guests who expect quiet, clean, and uninterrupted service. We plan hospitality projects around that reality. Noise, odor, and timing

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Commercial Roofing for Hospitality Groups in Houston, TX
Downtown Houston commercial rooftops

Tear-off is loud and adhesives smell. Above occupied guest rooms or a packed dining room, that is a problem. We sequence the loudest work to the lowest-occupancy windows a property can offer, coordinate around peak check-in and dinner service, and select low-odor systems and methods where fumes would otherwise drift into rooms or down into a dining area through the HVAC.

Protecting the guest path

Guests should never walk through a construction zone. We stage materials and equipment away from entrances, valet, and pool decks, keep debris contained and hauled promptly, and protect lobbies and walkways from the dust and traffic a roofing project generates. The goal is a guest who never knows the roof is being replaced over their head.

Houston Energy Corridor commercial buildings

Phased work to keep rooms sellable

A property cannot black out an entire wing for a roof. We phase the work so that occupied floors stay quiet and rentable while we work over back-of-house, ballrooms, or vacant blocks first, then move zone by zone. For multi-building resorts and restaurant portfolios, we sequence across buildings so the operation never fully stops.

Gulf Coast storms and the guest who is already checked in

Roof planning notes

Roof Scope Notes

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Hail resilience. Hail events drive a large share of commercial claims across the metro. On reroofs we recommend impact-resistant systems and cover boards that hold up rather than puncture.

Wind uplift at height. Hotel towers see higher wind speeds than low buildings, and the roof corners and perimeters take the worst of it. We verify membrane attachment and edge metal so the perimeter does not peel in a storm. Drainage under cloudburst rain. Houston rain arrives fast and heavy. We make sure primary and overflow drains, scuppers, and amenity-deck drainage can clear the volume, because ponding over a ballroom or a guest floor finds its way in.

Roof systems for hotels and restaurants

Storm prep and rapid response. Ahead of named storms we help properties secure loose components and document condition. After a storm we get crews up quickly to stop active leaks before water reaches rooms and public spaces. Talk with a Houston commercial roofing team