Across much of the United States, snow and ice are an unavoidable winter reality. And, while successful weather planning often focuses on plowing roads, salting, and clearing sidewalks, to prevent slip-and-fall incidents, mitigating snow and ice avalanches from building roofs can fly under the radar.
When sheets of wet snow or heavy ice release from roof edges, the consequences can be severe. Personal injury, property damage, operational disruptions, and costly liability claims are real risks that institutions have a duty to guard against. For hospital campuses and educational institutions, where public safety is paramount and foot traffic is constant, unmanaged snow and ice loads represent a significant and foreseeable risk.
That’s where a custom snow retention system for your institution comes into play. With layouts and product recommendations tailored to each roof, we carefully develop safe, durable, solutions based on building height, roofing material, pitch, and climatic conditions.
Throughout the Winter and especially during Spring freeze-thaw cycles, accumulated snow and ice can suddenly break free from roof surfaces and come crashing down without warning.
This is an obvious danger to anyone standing below but, what most don’t know is that, depending on the roof’s pitch and surface material, as well as the building’s height and the weight of debris, snow and ice can actually be flung a significant distance away from the original building structure (some reports estimate up to 30 feet!).
The risk of avalanches is especially pronounced on:
Roofs built with low-friction materials like metal, membrane, tile, or slate.
Steep-slope architectural designs; defined by OSHA standard 1926.500 as a roof with greater than a 4:12 pitch ratio or about 18°.
Buildings with long eaves or high-traffic pedestrian areas positioned below roof edges.
Unlike gradual snow shedding, avalanches happen without warning. An unexpected sunny afternoon, temperature fluctuations, seasonal changes, or even building heat loss through the roof can destabilize built up snow and ice. When it releases, the combined weight of debris can equate to hundreds or even thousands of pounds.
You might expect all commercial properties to face similar risks, challenges, and liability when it comes to preventing property damage or injuries from snow slides. The reality is that hospitals and educational institutions differ from typical commercial properties in several critical ways:
Hospitals rarely close, even during severe storms. Emergency departments, building entrances, fire exits, and ambulance bays must remain accessible at all times to ensure public safety. Additionally, hospitals commonly serve patients with mobility challenges or compromised health, limiting their ability to avoid danger zones or react quickly to falling snow and ice.
Similarly, schools and universities manage high volumes of students, staff, parents, and visitors moving between buildings. Sporting events, evening classes, and social gatherings, often require campuses and stadiums (particularly at the collegiate level) to remain open well into the evening. In both cases, the volume of foot traffic creates increased risk for a roof avalanche to cause injury.
In large metropolitan areas, it’s common for hospital and school campuses to be comprised of multiple buildings that feature:
Varying architectural styles, roof pitches, and roofing materials
Interconnected buildings
Multiple courtyards and pedestrian corridors
Walkways beneath rooflines
Multi-level roof systems
These design elements increase the likelihood that snow and ice accumulation will occur above occupied spaces. And, multiple buildings or widely varying designs make a “one-size fits all” snow retention system both unsafe and potentially unreliable.
From a risk management perspective, hospitals and schools are generally held to a higher standard of care due to their mission, occupancy, and public nature. This makes proactive and hazard mitigation an essential part of their duty to the public.
For hospitals and school campuses, off-the-shelf snow management solutions are rarely sufficient. Each building within the campus presents unique challenges, making a custom snow retention system essential. These engineered solutions are designed to match a building’s specific roof type, slope, layout, and snow load requirements. A high-performance custom snow management system should ensure:
To account for:
Roof material (metal, membrane, slate, etc.)
Roof pitch and geometry
Snow load requirements by region
Pedestrian traffic patterns below
HVAC units, solar panels, and other roof components
Engineered systems designed to meet or exceed:
Local building codes
Snow load standards
Manufacturer performance specifications
This is critical for risk managers, insurers, and legal teams.
Custom layouts should prioritize high-risk areas such as:
Emergency entrances/exits
Ambulance bays
Main walkways
Drop-off zones
Loading docks
Risk management professionals should collaborate with facilities teams to identify high-risk areas and buildings that require specialized solutions.
In regions where winter weather is a fact of life, engineered snow retention is not a luxury, it’s a critical safety component. Waiting for a snow or ice slide to occur before addressing high risk areas exposes institutions to injury, liability, and reputational damage.
By incorporating an engineered snow management system into your comprehensive risk management strategy your institution can:
Protect patients, students, staff, and visitors
Reduce liability exposure
Improve operational continuity
Demonstrate proactive, responsible facility management
We can help you get started. Contact our qualified sales team today or use our Snow Guard Calculator to get a custom layout and cost estimate for your project.