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Incomplete Building Envelope Designs Leave Building Owners with Costly Repairs

St. Louis, MO. – In cities like St. Louis, rainfall, temperature swings, and prolonged moisture exposure constantly test exterior materials, turning small enclosure vulnerabilities into costly restoration issues.

In humid coastal, urban, and inland environments, hidden envelope vulnerabilities can lead to widespread water intrusion years after construction.

So, what’s the problem?

Moisture-related issues are often discovered long after water has already penetrated the building.

That small stain you walk past every day has already traveled through your building’s envelope, hitting multiple areas that have yet to reveal themselves.

That brisk draft you feel might just be an early sign that your building envelope is no longer performing as intended.

Left unresolved, building envelope issues can affect indoor comfort, material performance, and air quality for those within the building.

Better Designs, Better Buildings, Better Solutions

Some of the most expensive building envelope failures begin after construction is complete and everyone assumes the envelope will perform as designed.

Many failures do not start with major storms or structural damage. They often start with one missed flashing detail. One failed sealant joint. One poorly designed transition between materials.

At Marina Place, a seven-story condominium building in Dunedin, Florida, just off the Gulf of Mexico, residents experienced significant water intrusion. Water was dripping from the middle of the ceilings and along the perimeter of the exterior wall onto the floor.

Walker’s investigation uncovered cracked stucco, failed sealant joints, and deteriorating façade conditions that allowed moisture to move deep into the building enclosure. What appeared to be isolated leaks had already spread through multiple exterior assemblies. When these transitions are overlooked, moisture rarely stays where it first enters.

Managing the flow of air, heat, and moisture begins long before occupancy. It begins with design.

When roofs, foundations, and vapor control layers are not designed to work as one system, moisture often finds the weakest connection first.

By the time signs appear inside, the damage may already be far beyond the point of a simple repair.

What can you do?

It is important owners take proactive measures to prevent water intrusion.

This includes diligent maintenance and strategic structural planning, regular inspections of roofs, basements and plumbing systems, and making sure the building envelope is properly sealed and waterproofed.

Long-term envelope performance depends on how water is managed from the beginning.

Roofs must drain quickly.
Standing water that stays on a roof for more than 48 hours can break down roofing membranes, find hidden imperfections, and accelerate failure.
Exterior walls need drainage, not just sealant.
Wall cladding sheds most rainwater, but some moisture always moves behind the surface.

Routine inspections of drains, flashings, seams, and roof penetrations help prevent moisture from entering the building in the first place.

When flashing, sealants, or drainage planes fail, water can become trapped inside the wall assembly, leading to mold, corrosion, and interior leaks.

Foundations should move water away from the structure.
Poor site grading, clogged drains, or damaged waterproofing membranes can allow water pressure to build against foundation walls.
Material transitions matter most.
Many envelope failures happen where systems meet.
  • Roof to wall
  • Wall to window
  • Wall to foundation
  • Slab to exterior wall

That pressure often pushes water through cracks, joints, or below-grade transitions and can also lead to failures in the foundation.

These intersections are often where moisture finds its first opening.


In a city like St. Louis, built on historic masonry and exposed to constant seasonal swings, long-term building performance often depends on how well the enclosure manages moisture over time.

For more information, visit www.walkerconsultants.com.

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