Emergency Board-Up and Tarping After Storm Damage
Emergency board-up and tarping are the first defensive actions taken after a storm compromises a building's envelope — covering broken windows, breached walls, and damaged roofing to stop ongoing weather exposure. This page covers the definition, operational scope, process mechanics, common deployment scenarios, and the decision criteria that determine which method applies. Understanding these protective measures matters because the first 24 to 72 hours after structural damage directly govern the scale and cost of the full storm damage restoration project.
Definition and scope
Emergency board-up involves installing rigid protective panels — typically oriented strand board (OSB) or plywood at minimum ½-inch thickness — over openings created by storm damage: broken windows, damaged doors, collapsed wall sections, and similar breaches. Emergency tarping covers damaged roof sections with heavy-duty polyethylene or woven polypropylene sheeting secured against wind uplift, preventing additional water entry until permanent roof damage restoration can be completed.
Both services fall under what the insurance industry and restoration trades classify as "mitigation" — actions taken to prevent secondary damage from compounding the original loss. The IICRC S500 Standard for Professional Water Damage Restoration treats mitigation as a distinct phase preceding remediation and restoration, and proper documentation of mitigation work is a foundational requirement for insurance claim support (see documentation for storm damage claims).
Scope boundaries matter here. Board-up and tarping are not repairs — they do not restore structural integrity, weatherproofing performance, or code-compliant enclosure. Their sole function is to arrest the deterioration clock. FEMA's publication Homeowner's Guide to Retrofitting (Third Edition) distinguishes between temporary protective measures and permanent repairs, a line that insurers, adjusters, and building officials track carefully.
How it works
A standard emergency board-up and tarping deployment follows a sequential process:
- Damage assessment — A qualified technician surveys all breached openings, identifies active water intrusion points, and photographs conditions before any material is installed. This documentation supports the insurance claim.
- Hazard clearance — Broken glass, loose debris, and unstable structural elements are cleared from the work zone in compliance with OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart E (personal protective equipment) and Subpart Q (demolition and debris).
- Measurement and cutting — OSB or plywood panels are cut to overlap openings by a minimum of 6 inches on each side. Industry practice, as reflected in guidelines from the Institute for Business and Home Safety (IBHS), recommends fastening into structural framing members rather than solely into window or door frames.
- Panel installation — Panels are secured using wood screws or structural fasteners at intervals no greater than 12 inches along the perimeter. Pneumatic staples alone are not considered adequate for wind-driven rain resistance.
- Roof tarping — Tarps with a minimum 6-mil polyethylene rating or a woven polypropylene equivalent are laid over damaged roof sections, extending at least 4 feet beyond the damaged area on all sides. Cap boards — wood strips used to sandwich the tarp against the roof deck — are secured with screws rather than nails to resist uplift forces.
- Perimeter sealing — Edges and seams are weighted or mechanically fastened to prevent wind from lifting the tarp. Sandbag weighting is common but considered secondary to mechanical fastening for any opening exceeding 10 square feet.
- Reinspection interval — Because tarps and boards are temporary, a reinspection at 72-hour intervals is standard practice, particularly when additional weather events are forecast.
Common scenarios
Emergency board-up and tarping are deployed across a broad range of storm types. The most frequent triggers include:
- Wind and tornado events — Flying debris and rotational forces routinely shatter windows and breach walls. Wind damage restoration and tornado damage restoration projects almost universally begin with board-up.
- Hurricane and tropical storm impacts — Storm surge and sustained winds can remove entire roof sections and exterior walls, requiring large-scale tarping operations that may cover thousands of square feet per structure. Hurricane damage restoration is the highest-volume deployment context for commercial tarping equipment.
- Winter storms — Ice dam formation and snow load collapse create sudden roof breaches. Winter storm damage restoration requires tarping materials rated for low-temperature flexibility, as standard polyethylene becomes brittle below 32°F.
- Hail events — Severe hail can puncture low-slope membrane roofing and crack skylights, requiring targeted tarping before hail damage restoration assessments are complete.
The distinction between residential and commercial scope is operationally significant. Residential board-up typically involves openings measurable in square feet; commercial storm damage restoration may require engineered temporary enclosure systems covering loading dock doors, curtain wall sections, or multi-story window arrays.
Decision boundaries
The primary decision point is board-up versus tarping, which is not always a binary choice — structures with both roof damage and broken openings require both simultaneously.
| Factor | Board-Up | Tarping |
|---|---|---|
| Location of breach | Vertical surfaces (windows, doors, walls) | Horizontal or sloped surfaces (roofs, skylights) |
| Primary threat | Wind-driven rain, intrusion, liability | Water infiltration, accelerated mold risk |
| Typical material | ½" OSB or plywood | 6-mil poly or woven polypropylene |
| Fastening standard | Screws into framing at ≤12" O.C. | Cap boards screwed to deck |
A secondary decision boundary involves who performs the work. FEMA's Individual Assistance program guidelines recognize mitigation costs but require the work be performed by licensed contractors in states where contractor licensing applies to mitigation services — a determination that varies by jurisdiction (see state licensing requirements for storm restoration contractors). Performing board-up or tarping without proper documentation can complicate insurance claims, particularly where adjusters dispute whether work was necessary or priced at market rate.
The third boundary is timing relative to structural assessment. Board-up and tarping should not substitute for the formal structural damage assessment — they precede it operationally but do not replace the engineering or inspection step that determines whether a structure is safe to occupy or re-enter.
References
- IICRC S500 Standard for Professional Water Damage Restoration — Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification
- FEMA Homeowner's Guide to Retrofitting, Third Edition — Federal Emergency Management Agency
- FEMA Individual Assistance Program and Policy Guide — Federal Emergency Management Agency
- OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart E — Personal Protective Equipment — Occupational Safety and Health Administration
- IBHS Fortified Home Standards — Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety