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EIFS “encapsulates the structure with an energy-ef-
ficient thermal blanket that reduces air infiltration and
thermal bridging, thereby stabilizing the structure’s in-
terior environment,” the EIFS Council website reports.
EIFS is stringently tested for adhesive bond, impact
resistance, moisture and vapor transmission and flame
resistance, and provides greater thermal performance
than most traditional exterior claddings given its con-
tinuous insulation (CI) orientation.
Garbin said the EIFS Council has also released its
much-anticipated EIFS Practice Manual.
“This unique, educational and promotional tool rep-
resents the most comprehensive and up to-date user
guide for EIFS industry professionals currently available
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38 – Winter 2014 — The Canadian Design and Construction Report
in the EIFS marketplace,” he says. “We are confident
that the details and illustrations section of the manual
clearly establishes a new quality benchmark as far as
building industry publications are concerned.”
The EIFS Council of Canada developed the practice
manual to clearly and authoritatively explain the appro-
priate use of EIFS as a leading exterior cladding of
choice, Garbin said.
“Specifically, the manual delivers a thorough under-
standing of EIFS in a format that is highly useful to
property owners, architects, building designers and
specifiers, building code officials, building inspectors,
EIFS manufacturers, EIFS distributors and EIFS con-
tractors. It includes recommendations for EIFS design
and installation best practices that promote satisfac-
tory performance and durability and is a complement
to the ULC S716 series of standards and clear insight
into the technical requirements fundamental to those
standards. It is also a comprehensive visual and written
framework for functional construction details and
specifications that illustrate EIFS acceptable design
and construction practices.”
The EIFS Council continues its Quality Assurance
Program (EQI) roll-out. “Our QAP program is the first
of its kind in the North American cladding space and
continues to be well received by architects and owners
alike,” says Garbin. “A number of EQI projects have
been tendered and awarded and are now in various
stages of progress at this time.”
Garbin says the industry recognized the require-
ment for a more skilled and certified trade network
across the country to meet the anticipated EIFS market
share growth, while ensuring a consistent installed
product deliverable coast-to-coast.
“The stars are aligned for this industry like never be-
fore in its long history in Canada,” Garbin says. “With
the new energy codes requiring significant thermal
performance enhancements, while at the same time
reducing thermal bridging, the continuous insulation
philosophy is finally becoming entrenched in our
codes. EIFS has been preaching this building science
philosophy for over 40 years in North America and the
building codes are finally on side with this thinking.”