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The Slate Savers©
system wins national award
In February, 2005 Mason Dixon Building
Maintenance in Stewartstown, Pennsylvania, an approved
applicator of the Slate Savers System, won the coveted Gold Circle Award at the
annual National Roofing Contractors Association conference held
in Orlando, Florida.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 21, 2005
Contact: Debi Rager
717-993-3990
410-472-3300
debi@slatesavers.com
Utility Patent issued for SLATE SAVERS Process
Stewartstown, Pa. –
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has notified Slate Savers of its
intent to grant patent #6,862,862 for “Pressure Injection of Flexible,
Polymer Grout into Slate Roofs,” the signature process of the Slate
Savers system for restoring and preserving existing, aging slate roofs.
It is anticipated that the Slate Savers process will
provide a maintenance-free second life cycle, extending the
serviceability of the existing roof components for several more decades.
The Slate Savers grouting technique is not a coating,
although a very thin film remains after the process to give the roof a
uniform look at the outset. This film wears off quickly (within a few
months to a year), leaving the slate grouting intact.
We are currently using the Slate Savers
system in a multi-million dollar, multi-year project on the historic
buildings at the Sheppard and Enoch Pratt
Hospital in
Baltimore, Maryland. At the hospital, we’re installing the Slate Savers
system at less than one-half the cost of slate roof replacement.
In
addition to the slate portion of the roof system, building owners and
managers often face serious issues with other components of the roof,
such as valleys and gutters. Slate Savers has a complete, integrated
system of products and application procedures that will address all
areas, including masonry and chimneys. These products have been
developed over the course of many years and are described in detail on
the Slate Savers web site, www.slatesavers.com.
The
approved local applicator for Slate Savers is
Mason Dixon Building
Maintenance,
also located in Stewartstown.

York Daily Record
Section
B Page 7 Tuesday, 19 Aug. 2003
Product saves weathered slate Slate Savers
offers an alternative to replacing worn slate
roofs. SEAN ADKINS Daily Record
staff
For Stan Ward, success can be
traced to the bottom of a steel drum filled with what appears to be
gallons of heavy slate-colored caulk.
Last year, Ward opened Slate Savers in Stewartstown and
offered customers an affordable liquid alternative to the costly
replacement of worn slate roofs. Rather than workers
replacing weathered slate with new stone, Slate Savers injects an
acrylic polymer mixed with ground slate into the cracks and crevices
of a roof. When dry, the individual sections of slate
originally secured by nails become one solid structure that can
extend the life a typical roof by 50 years, Ward said.
The
process has been filtered through various stages of trial and
error.
In 1990, two customers of Ward's Mason-Dixon Building
Maintenance in Stewartstown came to the structural repair company
with slate roof repair jobs.
At that time, Ward had been
working with an outside manufacturing partner to create a rubberized
asphalt material to repair slate roofs. Ward treated the two
roofs with the experimental material, but the end result required
slate-colored paint. The company returned to the draw ing
board in search of material that matched the color and function of
an original slate roof.
After four years of research, Ward
and his partner experimented with an acrylic polymer that would give
the roof flexibility and be aesthetically pleasing, Ward
said. Ward cranked up his marketing machine to get the word
out about the system and began to approach local contractors about
being licensed applicators.
Matt Ream, owner of Ream Roofing
Associates in Dallastown, said he listened to the Slate Savers
presentation but was not sold on the product. From an
industry perspective, an old slate roof should be replaced or
repaired with individual pieces of slate depending on the condition
of the roof, he said.
Ream said he wasn't sure if he agreed
with the Slate Savers process and questioned if the material could
cause a problem with the normal expansion and contraction of the
roof. "I wouldn't say we would never use Slate Savers, but
right now we are going by basic industry practice," he said. "The
system may be fine, I'm just not sure at this point."
Ward
said the flexible nature of the material tolerates thermal changes
and normal building movement, and can adjust to large loads such as
heavy snowfalls. "Some of the roofers we approached see the
process as eating into their workload and eliminating maintenance
work," he said. "Pieces don't fall out once you've done
this."
Aside from extending the life of a roof that is
reputed to last roughly 100 years, the process is cheaper than most
slate projects. Slate Savers would charge about $15,000 to
repair the roof of a 2,500-square-foot home using its slate-grouting
injection technique, Ward said. A resident with a
similar-sized home would pay roughly $30,000 to have a new slate
roof installed, he said.
"We get about two calls a week from
people asking about Slate Savers," Ward said. "We are getting a good
response from the industry."
Slate Savers is on its third leg
of a $1.8 million project that involves repairing brick, replacing
downspouts and grouting a 70,000-square-foot slate roof at Sheppard
and Enoch Pratt Hospital in Towson, Md.
Mason-Dixon Building
Maintenance has taken on the role of Slate Saver installer, Ward
said.
Regardless of the success of the business, Ward said he
has no plans to apply for a patent for the slate grout. 'That
would give away our trade secret and recipe," he said. "I believe
slate grouting will be the next buzz word in the industry next
year."
Reach Sean Adkins at 771-2047 or
sadkins@ydr.com.

York Daily Record
Section
A Page 10 Friday, 29 Aug. 2003
Lightning hits Md. hospital Slate Savers' owner
believes his grout system may have kept oxygen from reaching the
fire. SEAN ADKINS Daily Record
staff
Stan Ward has a theory on what
saved a 19th century hospital building in Towson, Md., from being
consumed by flames after a lightning bolt destroyed its fifth-story
cupola.
"It burned slower because the slate roof had been
grouted," said Ward, owner of Slate Savers in
Stewartstown.
Last year, Slate Savers covered the more than
100-year-old roof of Sheppard and Enoch Pratt Hospital's B Building
with an acrylic polymer grout aimed at restoring the slate
cover. Ward's business gives home and business owners an
affordable liquid alternative to the costly replacement of aging
slate roofs.
On Wednesday night, the hospital evacuated 51
psychiatric patients and 10 staff members from its B Building as a
lightning-induced fire ripped through its cupola. Roughly 150
firefighters and emergency medical personnel responded. One
female patient suffered minor injuries during the evacuation, and a
volunteer firefighter was hurt while carrying a hose.
Most of
the four-alarm blaze was contained to the cupola. The building below
sustained damage from the water used to extinguish the flames on the
roof, said firefighter Timothy L. Robinson of the Baltimore County
Fire Department. Ward said he believes the grout that his
company wedged in between the grooves of the slate prevented oxygen
from entering the burning building through the roof.
For the
last few years, Slate Savers has worked to complete its $1.8 million
contract to grout 70,000 square feet of Sheppard Pratt roof
space. A non-grouted slate roof ventilates oxygen, he
said. "It could be that the grout saved the building," Ward
said.
A Baltimore County Fire Department official could not
confirm if the grout helped firefighters get the blaze under control
Wednesday night.
As part of the building's fire suppression
system, alarms sound and the ventilation system shuts down,
preventing oxygen from feeding the fire, Ward said. For now,
an outside fire restoration contractor will ventilate the building,
remove the debris and install a tarp over the burned cupola, he
said.
Slate savers will not grout a new slate roof if the
hospital elects to restore the building.
"Our system is for
historic roofs," Ward said. "There's no reason to grout a roof until
it is 60 to 80 years old."
Reach Sean Adkins at 771-2047 or
sadkins@ydr.com.




Slate Savers © 2006
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