Daltile’s Perennial Porcelain Roofing Tile Listed in This Old House Magazine’s Annual Top 20 Building Materials

Daltile’s Perennial Porcelain Roofing Tile was recognized as one of the This Old House’s Top 20 Building Materials of the Year. Curated by This Old House magazine’s editors after months of research, review, testing, and input from industry pros, The TOH Top 20 Building Materials of the Year list continues the brand’s tradition of crowning the freshest, game-changing products of the year for construction and remodeling projects.

This year’s list was revealed in the July/August issue of This Old House magazine and online at www.thisoldhouse.com/top20. Daltile’s new Perennial Porcelain Roofing Tile was the first product on the list, with This Old House magazine providing the following commentary: “Daltile — Porcelain, known for its great durability and resistance to fading and moisture, is now going on roofs. The 9mm- and 12mm-thick tiles, which resemble slate, clay, or wood-shingle roofing, can be used anywhere in the country, have a lifetime warranty, and should last for at least 75 years. From $3 per square foot; Daltile.”

“At Daltile, we are bringing the innovation of porcelain roofing tile to market,” said Doug Pedersen, National Director of Roofing Sales for Daltile. “Porcelain roofing tile will be a game-changer for the specialty roofing products segment — destined to soon outsell the current slate, clay, concrete, and metal roofing options.”

“Daltile’s Perennial provides the ultimate roofing solution for contractors, builders, interior designers, architects, and homeowners who are seeking beauty, durability, and ease of installation in their roofing tiles, at a very competitive price,” said Pedersen. “Available in six colors and designs, the new line realistically replicates the look of slate, timber, and clay, but provides the strength of porcelain tile.”

 “Daltile’s new Perennial Porcelain Roofing Tiles are significantly less expensive than most slate, clay, synthetic/polymer shingles, and metal tiles,” concluded Pedersen. “Perennial prices are in line with concrete roof tiles and Class IV asphalt shingles.”

For more information, visit https://www.daltile.com/roofing.

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