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Mecklenburg County, NC · seat Charlotte · NOAA 2021–2025

Commercial Roofing in Mecklenburg County, NC

Charlotte and Mecklenburg County hold North Carolina's largest concentration of manufacturing and distribution roofs — and a NOAA storm record built on wind, not hail: 47 wind events in five years, a $500,000 thunderstorm-wind day in August 2023, and a $3,000,000 tropical-storm line in September 2024. Southeast Commercial Roofing re-roofs, restores, and documents those facilities to carrier standard. Call (866) 487-8572.

60
Roof-relevant events
8
Hail events
47
Wind events
1.75″
Max hail
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Mecklenburg County · NOAA storm events · 2021–2025

Mecklenburg County commercial-roof storm record, year by year.

Roofing-relevant events (hail, thunderstorm/strong/high wind, tornado) recorded in Mecklenburg County by the NOAA Storm Events Database, 2021 through 2025 (2025 partial). Hail in inches diameter; wind in mph.

YearHailWindTornadoMax hail (in)Max wind (mph)
202104050 mph
20222811.00″55 mph
202341811.75″60 mph
202409151 mph
20252800.88″50 mph

Source: NOAA Storm Events Database (NCEI), 2021–2025. Table columns reflect hail, wind, and tornado event types; the 60-event total also includes 2 tropical-storm lines (Sept 30 2022 and Sept 27 2024) discussed separately below. See the full North Carolina storm dataset for all 100 counties.

01 · A wind-led storm profile

Mecklenburg's record is built on wind — 47 events in five years, not large hail.

Mecklenburg County's NOAA file looks very different from the large-hail counties of western North Carolina. Of the 60 roofing-relevant events logged from 2021 through 2025, 47 are wind — thunderstorm, strong, and high wind — against just 8 hail events, with 3 tornadoes and 2 tropical-storm lines making up the balance of the 60. The county sits in the central Piedmont, downwind of the mountains, where the dominant severe-weather mode is repeated thunderstorm-wind lines rather than the discrete supercell hail cores that drop 2-inch-plus stones farther west. The largest hail on the entire five-year record is 1.75 inches — golf-ball size, in 2023 — and most hail years here run sub-1.0-inch. For a facility manager, that flips the inspection priority: the recurring threat is perimeter and corner uplift on low-slope membranes, not field-membrane bruising.

Wind has appeared every single year. The maximum recorded gust across the file is 60 mph (2023), with multiple years topping 50–55 mph. On a large-footprint Charlotte distribution or manufacturing roof, a 55–60 mph straight-line event is exactly the load that finds marginal edge metal, under-fastened perimeter rows, and aging adhesive before it touches the field. That is why the documentation discipline here centers on edge and corner zones, fastener pull-out, and seam integrity. As a certified applicator for Carlisle, Firestone, GAF, and Johns Manville, we detail wind-rated perimeters to the building's true exposure rather than reinstalling a failed attachment pattern. Per NRCA and SPRI edge-metal practice, the perimeter is where low-slope wind failures begin.

02 · The costliest events on record

September 2024 ($3M) and August 2023 ($500K) define the damage file.

Two events dominate Mecklenburg County's recorded property damage. The largest is a tropical-storm event on September 27, 2024, carrying a $3,000,000 county damage estimate in the NOAA-derived file — the single biggest line of the period. That date coincides with Hurricane Helene (FEMA disaster declaration DR-4827) as its remnant tracked north through the Piedmont. We reference Helene by name because owners know the storm that way, but in the underlying data table the row is logged as a 2024 Tropical Storm line — and we keep the claim file matched to the source record an adjuster can pull. For commercial roofs this was a wind-driven-rain and drainage event: water forced under flashings and at penetrations, drains overwhelmed, edge metal lifted.

The second is concentrated in a single afternoon. On August 7, 2023, a thunderstorm-wind event posted $500,000 in damage on its own — the bulk of that year's $520,000 thunderstorm-wind total — and a tornado touched down the same afternoon with a separate $20,000 estimate. When two perils land in the same hours, cause-of-loss separation becomes the negotiation: a carrier that can attribute a leak to the earlier January or March 2023 wind days, or to pre-existing wear, will reduce the payout. Other meaningful lines include an August 8, 2024 strong-wind event at $200,000 and a September 30, 2022 tropical-storm line at $65,000. Several hail events on the record show $0 in NOAA property-damage estimates — meaning NOAA logged no dollar figure, not that no roof was touched; we say so plainly rather than invent numbers. See the full North Carolina storm dataset for how Mecklenburg sits against the rest of the state.

03 · The Charlotte commercial roof market

North Carolina's largest manufacturing and distribution roof base.

Mecklenburg County is the densest commercial-roof market we serve in North Carolina. It is the state's largest manufacturing employment center, home to roughly 65,000 industrial workers — the most of any county in North Carolina — and one of the nation's largest distribution and trucking hubs, anchored by the I-77 / I-85 interchange and large industrial parks such as NorthPark Business Park just north of that interchange. Six Fortune 500 companies on the 2025 list are headquartered in Charlotte, including Bank of America, Honeywell, Nucor, Duke Energy, and Truist. Practically, that translates into a roof inventory weighted toward million-square-foot distribution centers, manufacturing plants, food-processing and cold-storage buildings, data centers, and automotive facilities — overwhelmingly low-slope TPO, EPDM, modified bitumen, and metal.

Those building types drive how we work. Large warehouse and distribution roofs reward phased, in-place re-roofs that keep loading docks and production running; cold storage and food processing need vapor-retarder and insulation detailing a dry warehouse never sees; data centers carry zero-tolerance leak requirements over live equipment. Our verticals page set covers the industrial facility reroof, storage and warehouse facility roofing, and commercial flat roofing work that makes up most of the Mecklenburg book. For city-level service across the metro, see Charlotte commercial roofing.

04 · Permits & the AHJ

Mecklenburg County Code Enforcement is the consolidated permit authority.

Mecklenburg County is unusual among NC jurisdictions: a single consolidated authority having jurisdiction handles building permits and inspections countywide. Mecklenburg County Code Enforcement, a division of the county's Land Use and Environmental Services Agency (LUESA) at 2145 Suttle Avenue, Charlotte 28208, issues building, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing permits for Charlotte, Huntersville, Matthews, Mint Hill, Cornelius, Davidson, and Pineville alike — reportedly the largest code authority between Washington, D.C. and Atlanta, issuing more than 100,000 permits a year under North Carolina General Statute 160D-1110. Commercial re-roof, tear-off, and recover work runs through their electronic plan-submittal and plan-review system. We pull permits in Mecklenburg's name and schedule inspections to keep a re-roof on the operating schedule.

That permit step matters on insurance work. A full tear-off and replacement frequently triggers current North Carolina Building Code and energy-code requirements — added insulation R-value, edge-securement standards, drainage upgrades — that did not exist when the original roof went down. Those code-driven upgrades are exactly what ordinance-and-law coverage exists to fund, and we itemize them as separate, covered O&L line items so an adjuster can evaluate them cleanly rather than treating them as out-of-pocket cost. Crews work to OSHA 29 CFR 1910.28 fall-protection standards on every Mecklenburg roof.

05 · Documenting a claim

What makes a Charlotte commercial claim pay: a documented cause of loss

A Mecklenburg County commercial claim turns on documentation quality, and the county's wind-led, multi-event years make that doubly true. Our adjuster-ready package includes drone imagery of the full roof with annotated damage, core-sample photography showing the existing system and damage cross-section, infrared or electrical-conductance moisture mapping, decking inspection, and a scope-of-work cost breakdown in carrier-preferred format — paired with RCV/ACV and depreciation worksheets. Every damage line is cross-referenced to the specific event date and county in the public NOAA record carriers themselves reference, so a $500K August 7, 2023 wind line or the September 27, 2024 tropical line can be tied to a verifiable cause of loss.

The RCV versus ACV distinction is especially live on the older membranes common across Charlotte's industrial corridor. Replacement Cost Value reimburses full replacement; Actual Cash Value reimburses RCV minus depreciation for age and condition. On a 20-year roof at heavy depreciation, the gap runs into hundreds of thousands of dollars on a large footprint. We document both scopes on every claim so ownership sees the real recovery picture and the depreciation-holdback path. We work the claim whichever way ownership prefers — direct with the carrier's adjuster or alongside a public adjuster — and the technical documentation is identical regardless of who negotiates. If a facility was hit, start with our storm damage response and North Carolina insurance-claim workflows. Southeast Commercial Roofing is an NCLBGC commercial contractor serving Mecklenburg County and the broader NC, SC, GA, and TN footprint; see the North Carolina commercial roofing overview for statewide context, or call (866) 487-8572 for a damage assessment.

Answers · Mecklenburg County

Commercial roofing in Mecklenburg County, NC — common questions.

Who provides commercial roofing in Mecklenburg County and Charlotte, NC?
Southeast Commercial Roofing serves Mecklenburg County and the City of Charlotte as an NCLBGC commercial roofing contractor headquartered in Flat Rock, NC. We are certified applicators for Carlisle, Firestone, GAF, and Johns Manville, installing TPO, EPDM, standing-seam metal, modified bitumen, built-up roofing, and silicone/acrylic coatings on industrial, distribution, food-processing, and data-center facilities across the county. Call (866) 487-8572 for a damage assessment or a re-roof bid.
Who issues commercial roofing permits in Mecklenburg County?
Mecklenburg County Code Enforcement — a division of the county's Land Use and Environmental Services Agency (LUESA) at 2145 Suttle Avenue, Charlotte 28208 — is the consolidated authority having jurisdiction for building, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing permits countywide. Unlike most NC counties, Code Enforcement handles plan review and inspections for Charlotte, Huntersville, Matthews, Mint Hill, Cornelius, Davidson, and Pineville, issuing more than 100,000 permits a year and enforcing the North Carolina Building Code under G.S. 160D-1110. We pull commercial re-roof and tear-off permits through their electronic plan-submittal system.
How many storm events has Mecklenburg County had since 2021?
NOAA logged 60 roofing-relevant storm events in Mecklenburg County over 2021–2025: 8 hail, 47 wind (thunderstorm, strong, and high wind), and 3 tornadoes. The maximum recorded wind is 60 mph and the maximum hail is 1.75 inches (golf-ball size), both in 2023. Wind, not hail, is the dominant peril here — Charlotte's Piedmont position puts it under repeated thunderstorm-wind lines rather than the large-hail cores that hit further west. 2025 figures are partial-year.
What was the worst commercial roof storm event in Mecklenburg County?
Two stand out in the NOAA record. The September 27, 2024 tropical-storm event (Helene's remnant moving through the Piedmont) carries a $3,000,000 county damage estimate — the single largest line in the file. Separately, the August 7, 2023 thunderstorm-wind event posted $500,000 in damage on its own, part of a $520,000 wind year, and arrived alongside a tornado the same afternoon. For low-slope commercial roofs both were wind-and-water events that attacked perimeter edge metal, seams, drains, and penetrations.
Do you handle commercial roof insurance claim documentation in Mecklenburg County?
Yes. Adjuster-ready storm documentation is central to our Charlotte-area work. Packages include drone imagery, core samples, infrared moisture mapping, decking inspection, a carrier-format scope of work, RCV/ACV and depreciation worksheets, and ordinance-and-law line items. Every damage line is cross-referenced to the specific NOAA event date and county so an adjuster can verify cause of loss against the public record. See our insurance-claims workflow or call (866) 487-8572.
What roof systems do you recommend for Charlotte-area commercial buildings?
Mecklenburg's building stock skews toward large-footprint distribution, manufacturing, and warehouse roofs in the NorthPark and I-77/I-85 corridor, where mechanically-attached or fully-adhered TPO and EPDM dominate. Given the county's wind-led storm profile (47 wind events, peaks to 60 mph), we spec wind-rated edge metal, enhanced perimeter and corner attachment, and tapered insulation with redundant overflow drainage. On metal and standing-seam buildings we detail for thermal movement and fastener back-out. Systems are matched to the building's actual exposure and use — cold storage and food processing get different vapor and insulation detailing than a dry warehouse.
Does Southeast Commercial Roofing serve industrial and distribution facilities in Mecklenburg County?
Yes — that is the core of our market here. Mecklenburg County is North Carolina's largest manufacturing employment center — home to roughly 65,000 industrial workers, the most of any county in the state — and one of the nation's largest distribution and trucking hubs, anchored by the I-77/I-85 interchange and parks like NorthPark Business Park. We work industrial and manufacturing plants, distribution and warehouse roofs, food processing and cold storage, data centers, and automotive facilities, with phased in-place re-roofs that keep operations running. See our industrial reroof, warehouse roofing, and commercial flat roofing pages.
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Mecklenburg County commercial roof storm-damage assessment.

We respond to commercial roof storm and wind damage across Mecklenburg County and the Charlotte metro. Adjuster-ready insurance documentation, drone imagery, infrared moisture survey, detailed carrier-ready scope, and phased re-roofs for live distribution and manufacturing facilities. 24/7 emergency response.