Condominium Association · Capital Repair

3340 N. Damen — Roof Replacement

6 units · Chicago, IL Flat roof w/ rooftop decks · ~4,800 sf 4 bids in hand · Jun–Jul 2026 Vote tonight · Jul 1, 6 PM

Overview

Four bids are in hand, and the vote is tonight. Three decisions face the board: which bid, how much roof and by what method, and how to pay. Those decisions and the governance needed to run the vote come first, then the considerations that bear on the choice. The later tabs hold the supporting detail and a model to run the numbers.

The three decisions

DECISION 1
Which bid?
Among full tear-offs, Matthews and MF Exteriors are the credible, fully-scoped bids near $55–59k; Prosmark is the low outlier to verify. Claude Recommendation: choose between the two established tear-offs once scope matches.
DECISION 2
How much roof, and tear-off or recover?
A partial job carries little warranty and leaves the North-side slope in place, and a recover only holds over a dry roof. Claude Recommendation: whole-roof tear-off.
DECISION 3
How to pay?
Reserves are free but finite, a lump-sum assessment may be burdensome, and a loan smooths it at an interest cost. Claude Recommendation: reserves plus assessment, loan only for the remainder.

Governance & the vote

Because the project tops $15,000, the Declaration requires a two-thirds vote — four of the six units — for both the project and the special assessment, and it is on tonight's agenda. Confirm quorum before voting; an owner who cannot attend may send a written proxy, which counts toward both quorum and the vote. Confirm these thresholds against the Declaration itself before relying on them.

Who pays for what

The structural roof — membrane, insulation, decking, and joists — is a Common Element the Association maintains, so the work is a shared cost split by ownership percentage. The deck surfaces on top belong to each unit; 3S is covering their own Trex and framing.

Key considerations

Do the whole roof. The warranty comes with a full replacement, a partial job carries little or none, and water pitches off the North side (Mark and Rachel's) and had previously pooled on the South side (3S), so replacing only the South side may leave the slope that sends water there untouched. However, clearing out obstructions to water flow on the south parapet wall may resolve this.
The four bids don't describe the same work. Prosmark, Matthews, and MF Exteriors quote a full tear-off; Ethic quotes a recover over the existing roof. Put them on the same scope and method before comparing prices.
Two whole-roof tear-offs cluster around $55,000–$59,000. Matthews and MF Exteriors are independent bids that land in the same range. Prosmark's $29,500 for the same scope is roughly half, so treat it as a figure to verify rather than a saving to bank.
Ethic's recover is cheaper but conditional. Laying new TPO over the existing modified-bitumen roof for $36,860 avoids a tear-off, but it traps any moisture already in the roof and fails early over a wet substrate. It's viable only if the South side is drier than the inspections suggest.
No bid clearly includes tapered insulation or re-sloping. The damage comes from water ponding on the South side, and a flat re-cover over the same slope can pond again. Ask every bidder in writing whether re-sloping is included.
Warranty terms vary widely. Matthews offers 15 years material / 10 labor but only with paid annual maintenance; Prosmark offers 9 years labor with no maintenance clause; MF Exteriors writes no labor warranty; Ethic's is not stated on the pages provided. Get each one in writing.
Permits are thin across the bids. Chicago requires a roofing permit for a full replacement. Matthews excludes it, Prosmark and MF don't mention it, and Ethic covers only a street loading permit, not the building permit.
Decking costs are open across every bid. Rot is billed as found, and both Ethic and MF say the price may change once the decking is exposed. Carry a contingency and require written sign-off before extra decking is billed.
Set a not-to-exceed ceiling in the authorizing motion. Because decking is billed as found, the motion should cap the project above the expected $60,000–$70,000 — around $80,000 — so rot uncovered during the work does not force a second vote, with owners paying only actual cost.
Confirm a lender before counting on a loan. Few banks make condo-association loans, and one this small may not interest them. Line up the lender before the loan tranche becomes part of the plan; otherwise a larger assessment on an installment schedule is the fallback.
Check insurance before finalizing the assessment. Ask the carrier about coverage for the water damage and the code upgrade, and have each owner check their HO-6 policy for loss-assessment coverage; either could lower everyone's share.
Authorize in time to finish before winter. Chicago roofers stop membrane work around October, and 3S's deck is already off, so a delay costs a year of use up there.