The Future of Façades
Moving forward, construction professionals should take the new standards regarding cavity depth into consideration when designing structures. Creating more resilient buildings is a critical mechanism for good environmental stewardship and for countering the effects of weather extremes and a changing climate. The fact that cavity depth has been built into the code provides an excellent opportunity for the specification of rainscreen systems.
Today’s leading rainscreen manufacturers are offering systems that can be specified to look like plaster or stucco, ideal for the Southwest. However, because it is part of a rainscreen system, it is built off the substrate to meet the suggested cavity depth. This permits builders, developers, and owners in the Southwest who still prefer a stucco look to achieve their desired aesthetic in a much higher-performing, code-compliant system. This has traditionally not been an option, but it is one that specifiers nationwide are taking advantage of to deliver virtually any look they desire in an integrated system; one that provides unparalleled longevity, performance, and health for the structure.
In dry climate zones, rainscreen systems present a chance for performance-minded professionals who think long term and seek to upgrade exteriors to exceed the code minimum. Given the recent wet winter weather in the western U.S., rainscreens are now a viable option, rain or shine.
Of course, rainscreen systems are also a good choice when those hot, sunny, and dry regions are experiencing their typical weather conditions. With new product innovations, architects and designers can choose from various high-performance finishes such as masonry veneer and glass as well as finishes that deliver a brick, wood, metallic, marble, stone, or granite aesthetic, all of which will hold up under the hot sun. When installed via an integrated rainscreen system, projects in the West and Southwest can achieve the desired aesthetic but now with the performance that considers both dry and wet weather.