Closed-Cell Spray Foam for a Metal Building in Montgomery, TX
A large, open metal building needs insulation that can keep up with both its scale and the demands of Montgomery County’s climate. For this metal building project in Montgomery, the owner chose closed-cell spray foam for a full envelope application across the gambrel roof and walls.
A Complete Seal Across a Large Open Span
This building’s gambrel roofline, with its curved purlins and open interior span, is a common profile for larger metal shops and storage buildings throughout this part of Texas. Closed-cell foam was applied wall-to-wall and across the full roof deck, following every purlin and structural transition, creating a continuous, sealed envelope with no gaps for heat or moisture to find a way in — even across a building of this size.
Why Closed-Cell Matters at This Scale
The larger the metal building, the more surface area there is for radiant heat to build up and for condensation to form against the interior of the steel panels. Closed-cell foam’s dense, rigid structure bonds directly to the metal, creating both an air seal and a vapor barrier in one application. With overhead lighting and a roll-up door already installed, this space is set up for active use — and a fully sealed envelope means the building stays workable through the heat rather than turning into an oven by midday.
Built for Montgomery County’s Climate
Montgomery sits on the north shore of Lake Conroe, in the same hot, humid IECC Zone 2A climate as the rest of Southeast Texas. Metal buildings in this climate face a constant battle with both heat gain and condensation, and closed-cell foam addresses both at once — protecting the structure itself as much as anything stored or operating inside it.
If you’re planning a metal building, shop, or storage structure in the Montgomery area, closed-cell spray foam is one of the most effective ways to protect the investment and keep the space usable year-round.
Request a free estimate from Weeks Spray Foam. No pressure, straight answers on what the job takes and what it’ll cost.
