Other Common Materials & Reading Specs
A few more you'll meet constantly:
- Drywall (gypsum board) — interior wall and ceiling surfaces.
- Insulation — fiberglass, foam, and others for energy efficiency.
- Roofing — shingles, metal, and membranes.
- Glass, sealants, and finishes — windows, caulk, and paint.
Reading the specs
Materials aren't chosen at random — the project specifications (the written "specs" that go with the drawings) call out the type, grade, and standard for each material. When in doubt, build to the specs and the approved submittals — not to whatever's cheapest on the shelf.
Going Deeper (Intermediate)
Beyond the structure: insulation (batt, rigid, spray foam — rated by R-value), drywall (gypsum, ½″/⅝″, Type X fire-rated, moisture-resistant), roofing (shingles, membranes), siding/WRB, glass, and sealants/adhesives.
Advanced / Pro-Level
Use the right product where it belongs:
- Insulation: cavity vs. continuous insulation, plus air sealing and vapor retarders — R-value alone isn't the whole story.
- Drywall types: Type X (⅝″) for fire-rated assemblies, moisture/mold-resistant for damp areas, cement board for tile/wet areas.
- Water management: a WRB/housewrap + flashing keeps walls dry — installed shingle-style (lap over, not under).
- Sealants: silicone (high movement/wet) vs. polyurethane vs. acrylic — matched to joint movement and exposure. Knowing each material's fire, moisture, and movement behavior is how you avoid callbacks.
Practice Challenge
A builder uses standard drywall in a tiled shower wall and on a garage's fire-separation wall. What two failures will follow? (Answer: in the shower it absorbs water and grows mold (needs cement board / moisture-resistant), and on the garage wall it fails the fire rating (needs Type X); using the right specialized board for moisture and fire conditions is essential.)
In Practice
The plans call for fire-rated 5/8" drywall, but standard 1/2" gets installed to save a few dollars — it fails inspection and breaks the fire-rated assembly. The spec isn't a suggestion.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Substituting a cheaper material than the spec calls for
- Ignoring the project specifications
- Using an interior material where exterior is required
Takeaway: Know the common materials — and always build to the project's written specs and grades, not just what's cheapest.
Educational overview — specific grades, sizing, and structural uses come from the building code and the project's engineer and specifications.