Leak Investigation: Why Patching Without Root Cause Analysis Guarantees Repeated Failure
Patching visible leaks without identifying the root cause guarantees repeated failure. Learn ACE’s systematic forensic investigation process that finds the real source.
Understanding Root Cause Analysis Methodology
In the building envelope consulting industry, understanding root cause analysis methodology is essential for preventing costly failures and protecting building investments. ACE Building Envelope Design brings decades of forensic investigation experience to every project across our seven-state Western U.S. service territory — California, Arizona, Nevada, Idaho, Oregon, Utah, and Washington.
The challenge with leak investigation is that problems are often invisible until significant damage has occurred. Water can travel through concealed pathways within building assemblies for months before becoming visible, and by the time symptoms appear, the underlying damage is typically far more extensive than what’s visible on the surface. Early identification and expert assessment are critical to minimizing remediation scope and cost.
According to industry research from IIBEC, building envelope failures represent one of the largest categories of construction-related losses in the United States. The Western U.S. faces unique challenges including atmospheric rivers in coastal California, extreme heat in Arizona and Nevada, and freeze-thaw cycling in Idaho and Utah — all of which stress building envelope systems in ways that require climate-specific expertise.
🔴 The Problem
Building owners spend thousands on leak repairs that fail within months because the ‘repair’ addresses the visible symptom — a ceiling stain, a dripping joint, a wet wall — without identifying the actual entry point. Water enters at one location and travels through concealed pathways before appearing far from its source. Sealing the visible symptom doesn’t stop the water from entering.
Critical Factors in Water Intrusion Diagnosis
ACE’s forensic investigation experience across thousands of projects has identified consistent patterns in leak investigation situations. Understanding these patterns allows our Leak Investigation team to diagnose problems accurately and design solutions that address root causes rather than symptoms.
Design-Phase Considerations
The most effective time to prevent leak investigation failures is during the design phase, when corrections cost dollars instead of thousands. ACE’s Root Cause Identification identifies vulnerabilities in design documents before they become field problems. This includes reviewing material selections, detail configurations, integration sequences, and compatibility between adjacent building systems.
Construction-Phase Verification
Even well-designed details can be compromised during construction if installation doesn’t match design intent. ACE’s Moisture Mapping provides observation at critical milestones to verify that field conditions match design requirements. Our 72-hour report turnaround ensures that identified issues are documented and correctable before subsequent work conceals them.
Climate-Specific Considerations
The Western U.S. presents unique challenges for leak investigation. Coastal California’s atmospheric rivers produce sustained, high-intensity rainfall. Arizona’s extreme heat accelerates material degradation. Idaho’s freeze-thaw cycles stress connections and sealants. Each climate zone requires specific design responses that generic details from manufacturer literature may not address. The ASTM provides standards that ACE applies to every project’s specific climate exposure.
✅ The Solution
ACE’s forensic investigation process uses a systematic, multi-method approach: visual assessment of exterior and interior conditions, infrared thermography to map moisture distribution, calibrated moisture meters to quantify conditions, targeted water testing per ASTM E1105 to isolate specific entry areas, and when necessary, exploratory openings to observe concealed conditions directly.
ACE’s Approach to Forensic Leak Detection
When leak investigation issues are identified in existing buildings, ACE’s Condition Assessment follows a systematic forensic methodology that identifies the true root cause of the failure — not just the visible symptom.
Our diagnostic process combines non-destructive assessment methods (infrared thermography, calibrated moisture meters, visual assessment) with targeted testing per published EPA standards to build a complete picture of what’s happening within the building assembly. This evidence-based approach eliminates guesswork and produces findings that are both technically accurate and legally defensible.
ACE’s FGIA/AAMA accreditation ensures that all testing results meet the highest recognized industry standards for accuracy, methodology, and documentation. This accreditation is particularly important for projects where testing results may be used in warranty claims, construction defect litigation, or code compliance verification.
Leak Investigation: Key Performance Factors
✅ The Resolution
ACE’s systematic investigation identifies the actual entry point, the failure mechanism causing the entry, and the water pathway that explains why damage appears where it does. This root-cause understanding drives remediation design that stops the water at its source — permanently — rather than chasing symptoms that reappear after every cosmetic repair.
Need Expert Help with Leak Investigation?
ACE delivers answers and permanent solutions backed by FGIA/AAMA accreditation and decades of forensic experience across the Western U.S.
Schedule a Free Consultation Explore ACE ServicesPreventing Systematic Investigation Process in New Construction
For developers, architects, and contractors working on new construction projects, prevention is orders of magnitude less expensive than remediation. ACE’s integrated service model — spanning envelope design, construction administration, accredited testing, and forensic investigation — means that a single team manages building envelope quality from design through occupancy.
This continuity eliminates the coordination gaps that occur when different firms handle design review, construction observation, and testing. The design team that reviewed the details is the same team observing installation and testing performance — ensuring that design intent is maintained through every phase of construction.
ACE’s leadership — CEO Conor Meyers and President John Harris — are directly accessible to every client through individual online booking links. This means you speak with senior decision-makers from the first consultation through project completion, not junior staff who must escalate questions through bureaucratic approval chains.
Frequently Asked Questions
How quickly can ACE respond to leak investigation concerns?
ACE offers same-day consultation availability and 72-hour turnaround on testing reports and site-ready solutions. For urgent situations, our team can mobilize within 24 hours to begin assessment.
What geographic areas does ACE serve for leak investigation?
ACE serves seven Western U.S. states from offices in Concord, California and Nampa, Idaho: California, Arizona, Nevada, Idaho, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. Our teams travel to project sites throughout this territory.
Is ACE’s testing accredited?
Yes. ACE is a FGIA/AAMA-accredited testing agency, meaning our test results meet the highest recognized industry standards for accuracy, methodology, and documentation. Our accredited results are legally defensible for code compliance, warranty verification, and litigation support.
What does a typical leak investigation assessment cost?
Assessment costs vary based on building size, complexity, and scope. ACE provides detailed proposals with transparent fee structures. Initial consultations are available at no charge to help determine the appropriate scope of investigation or design services.
Can ACE help with both new construction and existing building issues?
Absolutely. ACE’s six integrated service lines cover the full building lifecycle: envelope design for new construction, construction administration during building, accredited testing for verification, condition assessment for existing buildings, forensic investigation for failures, and third-party inspections for independent verification.