Flat roofs, terraces and balconies

7.1.1Definitions for this chapter

For the purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:

BalconyAccessible external amenity platform over an open space above ground level, with direct access from a building.
Balconies may take the form of:
Projecting – cantilevered from the external wall line of a building.
Inset – recessed inwards from the external wall line of a building.
Open – has guarding but no other form of vertical enclosure
Enclosed – protected from rain by a roof or balcony above and walls or weather screens to the
sides, (sometimes referred to as a ‘winter garden’).
Access balcony – Providing pedestrian access to two or more dwellings. (Sometimes referred
to as a ‘walkway’ or ‘access deck’).
Freestanding – fully, or partially, supported independent of the building structure.
Flat roofA roof with a maximum slope of 10 degrees from the horizontal.
DeckThe structural substrate, including timber boarding or sheeting, profiled metal sheeting on joists/ purlins or, the upper surface of in situ or pre-cast concrete and any applied screed.
Paving/DeckingA protection layer on which people walk, above the waterproofing layer, on a balcony or terrace.
FirringA tapered batten which creates a fall to a timber deck.
Flat roof build-upThe roof components above the deck including, as applicable, AVCL, insulation, waterproofing layer, and surface finish/topping.
Warm roofA roof with Insulation placed directly below the waterproofing layer.
Inverted warm roofA roof with Insulation placed directly above the waterproofing layer.
Cold roofInsulation below the deck with a ventilated void between the deck and breather membrane supported on the insulation.
Green roof - extensiveRoof topping of a shallow growing medium supporting plants such as sedums, grasses, wildflower species etc. Generally low maintenance and access for maintenance only.
Green roof - intensiveRoof topping of a growing medium to support trees, shrubs, lawns etc. and may include hard land- scaping, and used as an amenity space (sometimes referred to as a Roof Garden).
Blue roofRoof designed to attenuate the rate at which rainwater is fully drained from the roof and enters the drainage system.
Biodiverse (brown) roofSurface often of rubble, site excavated soil, sometimes with the inclusion of logs and rocks etc. to replicate the ecology of the local area and seeded or left to self-seed.
TerraceExternal surface for amenity use, above an internal space, above ground level and with direct access from a building. For waterproofing and thermal purposes, a terrace is treated as a flat roof.
Terraces may take the form of:
Private Terrace – for the use of a single dwelling.
Access Terrace – providing pedestrian access to two or more dwellings (Sometimes referred to
as a ‘walkway’ or ‘access deck’).
Raised podium – A terrace, other than an access terrace, above ground level, over a
non-habitable area(s) such as a car park or plant room(s). The podium itself may provide hard
and/or soft landscaped amenity areas.
Buried podium is a roof structure at, or below, ground level with hard and/or soft landscaping
and sometimes vehicular access for emergency vehicles or parking. Waterproofing to the podium is linked to the tanking of the basement structure below, as described in Chapter 5.4
Profiled self-supporting metal roofingProfiled metal sheeting forming the weather skin and spanning between structural supports e.g. purlins.
Profiled self-supporting metal deckProfiled metal deck, spanning between structural supports e.g. purlins, and supporting the flat roof build-up.
Fully supported hard metal roofingFlat hard metal sheeting forming the weather skin and fully supported on a deck.
Fully supported soft metal roofingSoft metal sheeting (lead) forming the weather skin and fully supported on a deck.
Air and vapour control layer (AVCL)Continuous layer of impermeable material to prevent the movement of air and water vapour.
Interstitial condensationCondensation that occurs within or between layers of construction.
Waterproofing layerLayer of impermeable flexible material forming the primary barrier to water ingress.
Water flow reducing layer (WFRL)A vapour permeable loose laid layer, resistant to water, UV, and rot, used to reduce the flow of water and fines into the insulation layer in an inverted warm roof system.
Design fallThe fall that a roof should be designed at to accommodate initial and long-term deflection and achieve at least the required ‘finished fall’ in use. The ‘Design fall’ is normal taken as twice the ‘Finished fall.’
Finished fallThe minimum fall that should be achieved on the waterproofing layer once the roof has been installed and fully loaded.
Zero fall roofsRoofs with a finished slope which lies between 0 and 1:80 and which achieve a finished drained surface that has no back falls or ponding.