Guest guest Posted September 19, 2006 Report Share Posted September 19, 2006 I suffer from chemical and mold injury for starters. I've been struggling all summer trying to find some safe materials I can use on my house and detached garage. I live in the Northeast, and I am going to need some materials appropriate to that climate. I have limited funds for this project. First of all, I need to replace the shingles on the sunroom of my house. There is a third roof of asphalt shingles which needs to replaced. Is there anything I can use besides asphalt shingles that will be safer for me? I cannot tolerate petroleum products, tar,VOC's, vinyl, or pine, etc. However, since it's a third roof, I don't know if the new shingles will affect me in the attic. The sunroof is off my bedroom. Additionally, while I have some roof vents covered with screens in my attic, I do not have any soffit vents, which my roofer has said I need in order to ventilate the attic properly. I have a problem with the air outside one side of the attic, due to my neighbor using toxic fabric softeners and dryer sheets. Her dryer vent faces that side of the house, so I am worried about have soffit vents over there. Other people have suggested I use an attic fan to ventilate. However, when I had mold remediation done an outgoing fan was put in my basement for the purpose of shifting the flow of the air in the house from going up instead of down, so I'm afraid an attic fan would change the airflow, which I don't want to happen. My garage with an attached shed is made of concrete blocks, and I believe some of it may be cinder block. I've had some of it patched with cement on the inside, but it probably needs more work. The garage has a flat roof, but the shed is slanted. The roof and the wood underneath have been leaking a lot for several years. Due to illness and other issues, I have not been able to replace it in a timely manner. The garage is very moldy, and since I have problems with mold, I cannot go in there. The last roof was a rolled one, and it was wrecked after a short number of years. I would like to know if there are any roofing materials that I might be able to tolerate better. Additionally, I would like to clean up the mold inside the garage if possible. I cannot tolerate bleach, and I don't have any air cleaners. Someone suggested I power hose in there and someone else suggested a regular hose. A third person said that's the last thing I should do. If I don't get this together, I'll never be able to go in there, and later if I have to sell it, I will need to have the roof intact. Any help anyone can give me would be greatly appreciated! NY State Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.