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MythBusters MYTH 3: Fabrics can make good moisture storage layers Fabrics offer an effective method for intercepting and distributing water, but distributing water and storing water are two very different things. By their very nature, fabrics can never be very effective as water storage components. Logic tells us that a ¼-inch thick fabric cannot hold more than ¼ inch of water. In fact, it must hold less. Most fabrics used for moisture management are thinner than ¼ inch. Moreover, a water reservoir that holds only ¼ inch of water cannot stave off green roof desiccation for very long (days at most). Don’t be misled by claims of moisture retention fabrics holding many times their weight in water. Fabrics are very light and water is heavy. You can never fill the Fabrics also have low capillary potentials relative to most components of green roof media. As a result, water captured in fabrics 1) will be rapidly consumed by the plants and 2) will drain out of the fabrics over time under the influence of gravity. What then are fabrics good for? Roofscapes, Inc. uses fabrics in the following ways:
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