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A roof is the top covering of a building. Flat roofs are often
covered with tar and gravel and provided with
drains to run off rain and snow. Variously shaped
roofs are built to naturally shed water. These include:
- lean-to
- single-sloped
- ridged
- pitched or gabled
- shaped gable
- dutch gable
- crow-step gable
- corbie-step gable
- saddleback
- hipped
- half-hipped
- mansard
- pavilion
- concial
- domical
- pyramidal
Some building styles, for example, geodesic and A-frame, blur the distinction between wall and roofs. Pitched roofs are often covered with asphalt shingles (in the US) although thatch, wood
shake, steel, slate and tile roofs are common elsewhere. Newer systems include solar shingles which generate electricity as well as cover the roof.
Several systems of construction transmit the weight of the roof to the walls of the building and tie the roof into the
structure. These include: ashlar-piece, brace (can be arched or wind), collar-beam, crown-post, hammer-beam and -post, king (or
queen) post, purlin, rafter (common or principal), ridge beam, ridge-board, strut, tie-beam (Tie rod), truss, and wall-plate.
By extension one can speak of the roof of a tent, automobile, etc. A convertible is an automobile built with a
folding, retracting, or removable roof.
See also Roof garden.
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