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Lowcountry · North Charleston · Summerville · Mount Pleasant · I-26 corridor

TPO Roofing Contractor in Charleston, SC — coastal-spec 80-mil flat roof.

TPO roofing Charleston SC — commercial TPO roofing contractor for North Charleston, Summerville, Mount Pleasant, and the Palmetto Commerce / I-26 industrial corridor. Coastal wind- and salt-spec 80-mil fully-adhered TPO for port-driven warehouse and distribution, the Volvo/Mercedes/Boeing/Bosch manufacturing cluster, cold storage, and Lowcountry medical campuses. SC LLR and NCLBGC licensed. 48-hour bids.

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01 · Lowcountry context

TPO roofing Charleston SC — coastal wind, salt air, and the port economy.

TPO roofing in Charleston, SC is what most of the Lowcountry's commercial building stock sits under — and for good coastal reasons. We are the commercial TPO roofing contractor Charleston SC facility owners call for flat-roof replacement, reroof, and storm-damaged single-ply repair across North Charleston, Summerville, Mount Pleasant, Goose Creek, Ladson, and the Palmetto Commerce / I-26 industrial corridor. TPO (thermoplastic polyolefin) dominates this market because its reflective white membrane cuts cooling load through Charleston's long, hot, humid summers; because it resists salt-air corrosion in a way exposed-fastener and ballasted systems do not; and because a properly-engineered TPO assembly hits the wind-uplift ratings the South Carolina coastal code and ASCE 7 demand. Our default Charleston build is 80-mil fully-adhered TPO over polyiso with enhanced perimeter and corner attachment — full system detail lives on the pillar page, so we won't repeat the membrane chemistry here.

The coastal wind environment drives the spec. Charleston County design wind speeds run 130–150 mph, with properties within a mile of the coast landing in the highest zones, and most Lowcountry commercial sites fall under Exposure C or D. A South Carolina-licensed PE must seal the structural and wind-load calculations for coastal commercial roof work — we coordinate that as part of the permit package. This is the single biggest reason we recommend fully-adhered TPO over mechanically-attached here: a fully-adhered membrane bonds across the entire substrate with no through-membrane fasteners, delivering far higher uplift resistance and eliminating the fastener back-out that salt-air corrosion can accelerate over time. Wind finds perimeters and corners first, so those zones get the heaviest attachment in our coastal detail. Mechanically-attached 60-mil still has a place on inland, lower-exposure buildings in Summerville, Ladson, and Goose Creek where the wind zone steps down and budget drives the spec.

Charleston's commercial roof demand is fundamentally port-driven. The Port of Charleston — including the Hugh K. Leatherman Terminal that opened in North Charleston in 2021 and can handle 20,000-TEU container ships — has pulled an enormous wave of warehouse and distribution construction into the region; the market reported record net absorption above 5.7 million square feet of industrial space in 2022, much of it big-box distribution on Palmetto Commerce Parkway and along the Summerville I-26 spine. Those are exactly the wide, low-slope distribution-warehouse roofs TPO is built for. Layered on top of logistics is an automotive and advanced-manufacturing cluster — Volvo, Mercedes-Benz Vans, Bosch, and Boeing — plus a growing cold-storage footprint tied to the Port's cold chain, and the MUSC / Roper St. Francis / Trident medical campuses. Flat and low-slope TPO covers all of it.

On hurricane and storm history: Charleston has a deep tropical record. Hugo (1989) remains the regional benchmark, and Matthew (2016), Irma (2017), and Dorian (2019) each drove Lowcountry commercial roof claims. Wind-uplift damage on single-ply membranes shows up first at perimeters and corners, frequently before water intrusion is visible from inside the building. We provide the full insurance-claim documentation package — drone imagery with damage annotation, core sampling, moisture mapping, decking inspection, and carrier-format scope-of-work. For the underlying wind, hail, and tropical-system record behind the Lowcountry market, our SC commercial storm-event dataset and the broader South Carolina commercial roofing page carry the detail. We carry SC LLR commercial licensing for this work and are NCLBGC licensed in our home state of North Carolina.

02 · Cost · Charleston · 2026

Commercial TPO roofing cost in Charleston by building type.

Installed TPO runs $9–16 per square foot across the Lowcountry depending on building type, attachment method, and coastal wind exposure. Coastal-spec 80-mil fully-adhered builds and cold-storage envelopes trend higher; inland distribution boxes run lower.

Port / distribution warehouse
$9–12/sqft
100K–500K sqft$900K–6M
Coastal-spec 80-mil fully-adhered
$11–15/sqft
30K–150K sqft$330K–2.25M
Automotive / advanced manufacturing
$10–14/sqft
100K–600K sqft$1M–8.4M
Cold storage / reefer logistics
$11–16/sqft
30K–260K sqft$330K–4.16M
Medical / institutional (MUSC/Roper)
$11–15/sqft
20K–120K sqft$220K–1.8M
Hurricane insurance-claim reroof
$10–15/sqft
varies sqftvaries by claim
Source: Southeast Commercial Roofing bid data for the Charleston Lowcountry, 2026. Pricing reflects TPO systems with typical polyiso build-up to energy-code R-value. Coastal wind zone (within ~1 mi of coast, 145–150 mph) enhanced perimeter/corner attachment +$1–2/sqft. Fully-adhered 80-mil vs. mechanically-attached 60-mil +$1.50–2.50/sqft (fully-adhered is our coastal default). Cold-storage vapor-retarder discipline and tapered-insulation drainage add cost. Excludes structural reinforcement and SC PE-sealed wind-load calculations (priced per project). Cost ranges align with our TPO systems pillar.
03 · Installation process · Charleston

How we install commercial TPO roofs in the Lowcountry.

Charleston TPO work adapts to three site types: the port-driven distribution and manufacturing boxes of North Charleston and Summerville, the cold-storage and reefer-logistics envelopes tied to the Port cold chain, and the medical and institutional campuses downtown and in North Charleston. The permit jurisdiction and coastal wind zone shift between them, but the core TPO discipline — fully-adhered membrane, robotic seam welding, enhanced perimeter detail — stays consistent.

01

Lowcountry site assessment + coastal wind evaluation

Licensed roofing professional on-site within 48 hours of the RFQ. Drone survey, 2 core-sample moisture tests per 10,000 sqft, deck condition, and a full rooftop-penetration inventory. Charleston-specific assessment: coastal wind-exposure category (most Lowcountry sites are Exposure C/D), design-wind-speed zone (130–150 mph near the coast), salt-environment corrosion review of existing flashings and fasteners, and drainage adequacy for high-intensity tropical rainfall.

02

Detailed bid with coastal TPO spec recommendation

Detailed bid within 48 hours of assessment. Default coastal recommendation: 80-mil fully-adhered TPO over polyiso, sized to NC/SC energy code R-value, with enhanced perimeter and corner attachment engineered to the building's wind zone. Mechanically-attached 60-mil offered for qualifying inland, lower-exposure buildings. Wind-uplift calculations and tapered-insulation drainage design noted in scope.

03

Charleston County / North Charleston permit + SC PE seal

Commercial roofing permit pulled through Charleston County, City of Charleston, City of North Charleston, Summerville, Mount Pleasant, or Goose Creek as the jurisdiction dictates. A South Carolina-licensed PE seals the structural and wind-load calculations the coastal code requires. SC LLR commercial licensing filed on the application; NCLBGC license documentation available for multi-state owners.

04

Hurricane-season-aware tear-off sequencing

Tear-off phased to keep the building weather-tight — critical in the Lowcountry, where afternoon storms and tropical-season moisture compress work windows. Temporary weatherproofing between phases. Decking repaired as substrate damage surfaces. Cold-storage and food-handling facilities sequenced around production and sanitation requirements with no airborne contamination over open product.

05

Insulation, fully-adhered membrane, and coastal flashing detail

Polyiso insulation installed to energy-code R-value with tapered drainage where ponding risk exists. TPO membrane fully-adhered (coastal default) or mechanically-attached per spec, with all field seams robotically heat-welded and probe-tested. Enhanced perimeter, corner, and penetration flashing engineered for hurricane-force wind uplift and salt-spray durability. All rooftop equipment re-integrated with new counterflashing.

06

NDL warranty, wind-rating documentation, and handoff

Manufacturer non-dollar-limit warranty registered (15–30 year, with wind-speed riders available for coastal exposure). As-built drawings, wind-uplift calculations, product data sheets, warranty certificates, and OSHA compliance records delivered. Final inspection with the local building official. Optional preventive-maintenance contract for the salt-environment annual inspection cycle.

Building-type deep dive

What we actually see on Charleston commercial TPO roofs.

The defining feature of the Charleston commercial roof inventory is scale. The port economy has produced some of the largest single-ply roof assets in the Southeast, and the wide, low-slope geometry of a distribution box is exactly where TPO earns its keep. Walmart's roughly 3-million-square-foot distribution center in Ridgeville (Dorchester County, on the same I-26 corridor as Volvo) and the various big-box fulfillment operations along the Palmetto Commerce Parkway and Investment Drive corridors — including Amazon's North Charleston facility (CHS1) at 7290 Investment Drive — represent acre-scale TPO field that lives or dies on seam integrity and drainage. On roofs this large, ponding from Charleston's high-intensity tropical rainfall is the slow killer; tapered-insulation drainage design and robotic heat-welded seams matter more than membrane brand. A reflective white TPO surface on a box this size also returns a measurable cooling-cost reduction across the Lowcountry summer.

The automotive and advanced-manufacturing cluster carries the region's most demanding roof specs. Volvo Cars' 2.3-million-square-foot plant at Camp Hall in Berkeley County — Volvo's sole North American manufacturing facility, opened in 2018 and now building the all-electric EX90 and Polestar 3 — is the single largest manufacturing roof asset in the market. Mercedes-Benz Vans' 1-million-square-foot Sprinter plant in North Charleston (opened 2018), Boeing's 787 Dreamliner final-assembly campus in North Charleston (the 642,000-sqft assembly building dates to 2011), and Bosch's long-running North Charleston components operation round out the cluster. Manufacturing roofs of this class carry heavy rooftop mechanical screening, process-equipment penetrations, and scheduled-shutdown access constraints — work sequences around production, and the flashing-and-penetration map never comes off a desk estimate. Our manufacturing facility roofing and automotive/EV plant discipline applies across this cohort.

Cold storage is a fast-growing and technically distinct Charleston sub-market, driven by the Port of Charleston cold chain and the reefer-container capacity at the Leatherman and Wando Welch terminals. Charleston Cold Storage (about 261,779 sqft of Class A refrigerated space in Ridgeville, Dorchester County, operated by Arcadia Cold), East Coast Warehouse & Distribution's 259,200-sqft cold facility at 2040 Sewanee Road in North Charleston, the Lineage port facility on Palmetto Commerce Parkway, and FlexCold's announced 151,600-sqft Dorchester County build represent a refrigerated-envelope population that does not roof like a dry-goods warehouse. Cold-storage TPO demands strict vapor-retarder discipline — penetrations that compromise the vapor barrier invite condensation and ice in the deck — which is exactly why fully-adhered TPO (no through-membrane fasteners) is the right system. Our cold-storage roofing page covers the vapor-control detail.

The medical and institutional campuses are the longest-lead, most documentation-heavy Charleston sub-market. MUSC (Medical University of South Carolina) downtown, Roper St. Francis Healthcare (Roper Hospital downtown, plus West Ashley and Mount Pleasant hospitals, and the new 27-acre Roper medical campus rising in North Charleston for late-2020s completion), and HCA's 321-bed Trident Medical Center in North Charleston anchor the healthcare roof inventory. Occupied-hospital reroof means infection-control coordination, HVAC-intake protection during tear-off, and zero airborne particulate over patient-area air handlers — for GMP-adjacent pharmacy compounding and research spaces, our pharma/biotech facility discipline applies. Capital-planning horizons here run 18–36 months, not 60-day RFQs, and TPO with a documented wind-uplift rating is the standard low-slope spec on the newer towers and ancillary buildings.

Cutting across all four sub-markets is coastal storm exposure. Charleston's tropical history — Hugo in 1989 as the regional benchmark, then Matthew, Irma, and Dorian in the 2016–2019 window — has shaped how we spec and document every Lowcountry roof. Post-storm, the claim patterns we see most are wind-uplift failures at perimeters and corners on mechanically-attached single-ply (often invisible from the ground until water intrusion begins), debris-impact punctures, and flashing failures exacerbated by sustained wind. The storm-damage assessment and insurance-claim documentation packages — drone imagery, core samples, moisture mapping, decking inspection, carrier-format scope — are a standing part of Charleston commercial work, not an exception. None of the facilities named above is a customer-list claim; it is the named-facility map of the Lowcountry commercial market we operate inside, and the TPO spec, cost band, and permit pattern that goes with each sub-market.

Recent projects

Charleston and Lowcountry commercial TPO projects.

Port-driven distribution and warehouse, automotive and advanced manufacturing, cold storage and reefer logistics, medical campuses, and hurricane insurance-claim reroofs across North Charleston, Summerville, Mount Pleasant, and the I-26 corridor.

TPO · Fully Adhered
75,000 sqft Cold Storage Facility
Henderson County, NC · Completed Q1 2026
Sqft75K
System80-mil TPO FA
Timeline10 days
Standing Seam Metal
220,000 sqft Automotive Plant
Alamance County, NC · Completed Q4 2025
Sqft220K
System24-ga SS Metal
Timeline21 days
TPO · Mechanically Attached
350,000 sqft Data Center
Coweta County, GA · Completed Q1 2026
Sqft350K
System80-mil TPO
Timeline26 days
04 · Coastal wind & salt environment

Why Charleston TPO is engineered differently.

The two forces that make Lowcountry TPO different from Piedmont or mountain work are hurricane-force wind and salt air. Charleston County's 130–150 mph design-wind zone means the perimeter and corner pressure coefficients in ASCE 7 are aggressive — these are the zones that fail first, so they get the densest attachment in our coastal detail. A South Carolina-licensed PE seals the wind-load calculations on every coastal commercial roof, and the membrane assembly is engineered to that number, not to a generic spec. This is why fully-adhered 80-mil TPO is our default here: no through-membrane fasteners to back out, full-substrate bond, and the highest practical uplift resistance.

Salt-spray corrosion is the second factor. Within a few miles of the coast, exposed metal fasteners, termination bars, and flashing components corrode faster than they do inland — which is another mark against mechanically-attached systems near the water, and a reason we favor non-corroding adhered details, stainless or coated fasteners where fasteners are unavoidable, and an annual salt-environment inspection cycle. The reflective TPO surface itself holds up well to UV and salt over a 20–30 year service life, and 80-mil membrane buys an additional 5–8 years over 60-mil in this exposure.

Drainage is the third Lowcountry concern. Charleston's high-intensity summer thunderstorms and tropical rainfall put real water volume on flat roofs fast, and ponding accelerates membrane aging and seam stress. On the large distribution and manufacturing boxes especially, we design tapered polyiso to move water to drains and avoid standing water — a detail that matters more on an acre-scale roof than almost anything else. For older buildings carrying a coating-eligible membrane with remaining service life, silicone restoration coatings can extend life and improve reflectivity without a full tear-off, though in the coastal wind zone a full fully-adhered reroof is usually the more durable answer.

For hurricane insurance-claim work, the documentation discipline matters as much as the roofing. Carriers active in Lowcountry commercial scrutinize RCV vs. ACV, ordinance-and-law coverage, and wind-vs.-flood causation closely — the difference between a covered claim and a denied one often comes down to documentation quality. Our package includes drone imagery with damage annotation, core-sample photography, infrared moisture mapping, decking inspection, and a carrier-format scope-of-work. The state-level SC storm-event dataset draws on the NOAA Storm Events Database for the underlying wind and tropical-system record.

05 · Answers

Questions about TPO roofing in Charleston, SC.

Who is a TPO roofing contractor in Charleston, SC?
Southeast Commercial Roofing is a commercial TPO roofing contractor serving Charleston, SC and the broader Lowcountry — North Charleston, Summerville, Mount Pleasant, Goose Creek, Ladson, and the Palmetto Commerce / I-26 industrial corridor. We are licensed for South Carolina commercial work (SC LLR) and NCLBGC licensed in our home state of North Carolina. Our default Charleston spec is 80-mil fully-adhered TPO over polyiso, chosen specifically for the coastal wind-uplift and salt-spray environment of Charleston County, where design wind speeds run 130–150 mph within a mile of the coast. Mechanically-attached 60-mil is available where budget drives the spec on inland, lower-exposure buildings. Commercial TPO reroof in the Charleston market runs $9–14 per square foot. Full system detail, warranty terms, and spec comparisons live on our TPO flat roof systems page. We deliver a detailed bid within 48 hours of a site visit.
Why is TPO a good fit for Charleston's coastal climate?
TPO is the most common single-ply membrane on Lowcountry commercial roofs for three coastal reasons. First, its reflective white surface cuts cooling load in Charleston's long, hot, humid summers — a real operating-cost factor on the big warehouse and distribution boxes along Palmetto Commerce Parkway. Second, TPO is highly resistant to salt-air corrosion; unlike exposed metal fasteners and ballasted systems, a fully-adhered TPO membrane has no field penetrations and no loose ballast for hurricane-force wind to mobilize. Third, properly-engineered TPO attachment achieves the wind-uplift ratings the SC coastal code and ASCE 7 demand for Charleston County. Our default coastal build is 80-mil fully-adhered TPO with enhanced perimeter and corner attachment — the zones the wind always finds first.
What does commercial TPO roofing cost in Charleston, SC?
Charleston commercial TPO roof replacement runs $9–14 per square foot installed. Mechanically-attached 60-mil reroof on a straightforward inland box falls toward $9–11; fully-adhered 80-mil coastal-spec builds run $11–15 with the enhanced perimeter attachment and salt-environment detailing the coast requires. A 100,000 sqft North Charleston distribution roof typically lands in the $900K–1.5M range. Cold-storage and reefer-yard envelopes add vapor-retarder discipline that pushes cost higher. See the cost table below for building-type ranges, and our TPO pillar page for the mechanically-attached vs. fully-adhered cost breakdown.
Do you handle coastal wind and hurricane-claim TPO work in the Lowcountry?
Yes. Charleston sits in a 130–150 mph design-wind zone and has a long tropical-storm and hurricane history (Hugo in 1989 is still the regional benchmark; Matthew, Irma, and Dorian all drove Lowcountry commercial claims). Wind-uplift damage on single-ply roofs shows up first at perimeters and corners — often before water intrusion is visible from inside. We provide the full insurance-claim documentation package: drone imagery with damage annotation, core sampling, moisture mapping, decking inspection, and carrier-format scope-of-work. For the underlying wind, hail, and tropical-system record behind the Lowcountry, see the SC commercial storm-event dataset.
What types of Charleston commercial buildings do you put TPO on?
The Charleston commercial inventory is heavy on port-driven warehouse and distribution (Palmetto Commerce Parkway, the I-26 / Summerville corridor, Ladson, Ridgeville), automotive and advanced manufacturing (the Volvo, Mercedes-Benz Vans, Bosch, and Boeing cluster), cold storage and reefer logistics tied to the Port of Charleston cold chain, and medical and institutional (MUSC, Roper St. Francis, Trident). Flat and low-slope TPO dominates all four. For the big logistics boxes our distribution-warehouse roofing approach applies; for refrigerated envelopes, our cold-storage roofing discipline; for the plants, our manufacturing facility roofing.
Are you licensed for commercial roofing in South Carolina?
Yes. We carry South Carolina LLR commercial contractor licensing for Lowcountry work and are NCLBGC licensed in our home state of North Carolina (verify via the NCLBGC public directory). Charleston County and the City of North Charleston require a SC-licensed PE to seal structural and wind-load calculations for coastal commercial roof work, which we coordinate as part of the permit package. We also follow OSHA 29 CFR 1910.28 fall protection and NRCA quality standards on every Lowcountry project.
Mechanically-attached or fully-adhered TPO for a Charleston roof?
For most Charleston commercial roofs we recommend fully-adhered 80-mil TPO. The coastal wind environment is the deciding factor: a fully-adhered membrane bonds across the entire substrate with no through-membrane fasteners, delivering far higher wind-uplift resistance than a mechanically-attached system and eliminating the fastener-back-out failures that salt-air corrosion can accelerate. Mechanically-attached 60-mil remains a cost-effective choice on inland, lower-exposure buildings away from the immediate coast — Summerville, Ladson, Goose Creek warehouse stock where the wind zone steps down. The TPO systems page compares both in detail.
How long does a commercial TPO installation take in Charleston?
A typical 50,000–100,000 sqft Lowcountry warehouse or distribution roof runs 7–14 working days, weather permitting — and Charleston weather permits matter, since afternoon thunderstorms and tropical-season moisture compress the workable window. Tear-off adds 2–3 days; cold-storage vapor-retarder work and heavy rooftop-equipment penetrations add more. We phase tear-off to keep facilities weather-tight and operational, sequence around port-logistics and production schedules, and build hurricane-season weather contingency into the timeline.
Do you also do TPO work in other Carolina metros?
Yes. Beyond Charleston we run commercial TPO crews across the Carolinas — Greenville, SC in the Upstate, Charlotte, NC, and Asheville, NC out of our Flat Rock headquarters. We carry SC LLR and NCLBGC licensing and the same 80-mil TPO discipline across all of them, adjusting the attachment spec to each market — coastal wind in Charleston, hail in the Piedmont, freeze-thaw and elevation in the mountains.
06 · Related TPO & metro pages

TPO and commercial roofing across the Carolinas.

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Port distribution, automotive and advanced manufacturing, cold storage, medical campus, or hurricane insurance-claim reroof across North Charleston, Summerville, Mount Pleasant, and the Lowcountry. Coastal wind- and salt-spec TPO. SC LLR and NCLBGC licensed. 48-hour detailed bid.