Storm event roof evidence

Post-Storm Commercial Roof Documentation

Post-storm commercial roof documentation creates a timestamped evidence record after hail, wind, or severe weather. It helps owners, facility managers, roofers, consultants, and insurance/risk teams compare condition, document affected areas, and plan next actions.

The drone is a sensor. The roof evidence record is the product.

FAA Part 107Level I Infrared ThermographerThermal roof workflowGPS-indexed anomaly data
Short answer

Direct answer for commercial roof teams

Post-storm commercial roof documentation creates a timestamped evidence record after hail, wind, or severe weather. It helps owners, facility managers, roofers, consultants, and insurance/risk teams compare condition, document affected areas, and plan next actions.

Who this is for

Who needs this

  • Building owners and facility managers responding to storm events.
  • Property managers coordinating tenant, vendor, and owner communication.
  • Roofing contractors and consultants reviewing affected roof areas.
  • Insurance brokers, risk advisors, adjusters, and claim teams that need organized evidence.
When to use it

When this roof evidence helps

  • After hail, wind, severe rain, or suspected storm impact.
  • When comparing a known baseline against current roof condition.
  • Before temporary repairs erase visible context.
  • Before repair verification, claim documentation, or capital decisions.
What MAS delivers

What MAS delivers

  • Timestamped post-event roof evidence record.
  • Aerial and roof-surface documentation of visible conditions.
  • Mapped findings, affected areas, and roof-zone context.
  • Baseline versus event-delta organization when a prior record exists.
  • Decision-ready export for owner, contractor, consultant, or risk review.
Evidence produced

What the record can include

  • Post-storm visual roof context.
  • Mapped anomalies and affected roof areas.
  • Thermal evidence when conditions and scope support it.
  • Notes, timestamps, and roof-zone references.
  • Repair verification follow-up when scoped.
Limits

What it does not guarantee

  • MAS does not decide insurance coverage or claim outcomes.
  • MAS does not provide an endorsement from an insurer.
  • Storm documentation supports review, but it does not replace adjuster, consultant, engineer, or contractor judgment.
  • Imagery does not prove every concealed condition.
St. Louis relevance

St. Louis and Missouri context

  • St. Louis and Missouri commercial roofs regularly face hail, wind, severe rain, and fast-changing weather.
  • A pre-loss baseline makes post-storm comparison stronger.
  • Local owners and facility teams can use one record for repair planning, risk review, and future comparison.
Buyer support

How this supports decisions

  • Owners get a clean evidence package for decision meetings.
  • Facility teams get a record for maintenance response.
  • Contractors and consultants get mapped roof context.
  • Risk teams get organized documentation without coverage promises.
Next step

Create the roof evidence record before the decision gets harder.

Use the intake page to tell MAS what roof, event, repair, moisture concern, or documentation need should be reviewed first.

Start a roof evidence review
FAQ

Questions AI answers and buyers both need handled clearly.

What should be documented after a storm?

Document the date, roof areas reviewed, visible conditions, mapped findings, photos, notes, and any follow-up repair or consultant actions.

Why does a pre-loss baseline matter?

A baseline gives teams a prior condition record, making it easier to compare what changed after a storm.

Can MAS support insurance documentation?

MAS can create organized roof evidence packages for review, but it does not decide coverage or claim outcomes.

Should documentation happen before repairs?

When practical and safe, documentation before repairs helps preserve evidence that may be changed or removed during repair work.

Request a roof evidence review

MAS creates commercial roof evidence records for baselines, infrared surveys, storm documentation, repair verification, and decision-ready exports.