for Cold Climate Housing and much more

Last Updated: , Created: Friday, December 21st, 2007

OVERVIEW: Roof Ice Dams & Icicles

"Why do some houses have ice dams on the roof and others do not?"

The overview is below -- for details go to Ice Dams -- for contractors who will really solve this problem, scroll to the bottom of this article.

 

What causes ice dams and ice cicles?

Ice dams develop when snow is on the roof, outdoor temperatures are only slightly below freezing, and there is spot or generalized heat loss from the house into the attic/roof section of your house that accumulates under the roof deck. The heat melts the bottom of the snow pack, the melted snow runs down the roof until it gets to the overhang of the roof. Without the heat from the house, the water freezes, creating an ice dam. The solution lies in finding a way to keep the roof cold whenever it is cold outdoors. The snow will either melt and run off the roof, or stay put.  For details on how to X-Ray your own roof for heat losses, follow this link.

 

Prioritizing the solutions

Research from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation has pointed out priorities for solving this problem.

First and most important is warm air leakage from the house below -- air sealing the attic from the house.

Second is good insulation to keep the heat in the house and away from the attic.

Last (not first) is attic ventilation, to remove heat build-up that you could not prevent. Anywhere insulation touches the roof, the ventilation cannot keep the roof frozen and heat will flow through the insulation to melt the snow. Complicated roofs have more problems because the structure tends to block the cold ventilation airflow.

Provide continuous airflow to the underside of the roof over an attic that does not have too much heat loss from the house below and you will have no more ice. Easily said, not always easy to do.

"Last year I installed a new roof on my 40 year old house. In doing so, I installed two new soffit vents so that the roof now has four vents. I was having - and continue to have - problems with ice dams forming. Are the vents not doing the trick, and what can I do to correct the problem?"

It almost makes me cry when I hear that someone has completely rebuilt their roof, making the new roof exactly the same as the old problematic roof. Good new houses have air tight ceilings below the attic, lots of attic insulation and no ice dams because they have built more space between the top of the outer walls and the roof -- enough space for a lot of insulation and a lot of ventilation both. When you build a new roof on an old house, you can raise it just enough to get that essential ventilation, but so many contractors just add more vents. The key is, after controlling heat loss from the house into the attic, continuous venting that keep every square inch of the roof deck freezing cold, so that the snow doesn't melt on the bottom of the snow pack.  

In renovation where you don't want to rebuild the whole roof, when you are going to change the shingles is the time of opportunity to open the roof from the top and get things right.  One great technique is to spray foam insulation over the top of the wall blocking all hot air from the house wall and leaving room for the attic ventilaiton -- and adding insulation baffles from the top down.  Details on working from the top down can be seen here

 

The Band-Aid that can buy you time

Electrical de-icing cables can be a workable Band-Aid solution to roof ice problems, but never a perfect solution. When nothing is going to work on your house short of raising the roof higher to provide for more insulation and more ventilation, de-icing cables can provide a means to prevent water backing up under the shingles. It does not eliminate ice, it cuts drainage channels through the ice. One essential point is that the cables need to be properly on the roof, as well as along the bottom of the rain gutter, as well as down the downspout right out onto the ground. Otherwise the water will stop flowing somewhere the cable stops and back up from there.

 

Finding a contractor who will go into the attic to do things right.

Homeowners are constantly told - "We don't go into attics.  We will just add more ventilation from the outside."  The real work of getting attics and roofs to function properly is kind of lost between trades.  We need people who will perfect air sealing of the ceiling, improve insulation and provide full attic continuous ventilation. 

In a collective search for contractors who will do this work throughly, from the ceiling up, I invite you with the Blog below, to send me company names and the geographic area they serve.  If I like what I hear, I will list their names here.  If you hire them, please give me feedback, positive or negative, so we can together develop a list of real problem solvers. 


Keywords: Ice Dams, Icicles, Common Questions, Ice, Environmental, Overview, Roof

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Jon Eakes on January 09, 2023 12:17

The company "Basement Systems" has expanded their specialty to "Attic Systems". At first I was skeptical about if this US company got it right for a cold climate. The couple of jobs that I have followed have impressed me with them working on each of the critical points I raised above. Here is their Montreal franchise contact: https://en.systemeseconergie.ca/ -- Contact them for leads to other cities.

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