Statement leading to lead magnet.

Mastic & Sealant Repair for Commercial Buildings

Mastic & sealant repair protects commercial glazing from leaks and failure. Get expert glazing repair with GLRE. Request a free site survey.

mastic & sealant repair

Table Of Contents

Mastic and sealant repair involves removing degraded or failed sealant joints on commercial buildings and replacing them with fresh, weatherproof sealant to restore the building envelope. For commercial properties, failed sealant is one of the most common causes of water ingress, air leakage, and progressive glazing damage. Addressing it promptly through a qualified commercial glazing repair contractor is far more cost-effective than waiting until structural damage has taken hold.

What Is Mastic Sealant and What Does It Do?

Mastic sealant is a flexible, adhesive compound applied to joints and gaps in a building’s external envelope. On commercial buildings it is most commonly found around glazing frames, curtain walling, cladding panels, expansion joints, and roofline interfaces.

Its primary function is to create a weathertight, flexible bond between building components that naturally expand and contract at different rates. Because commercial glazing systems involve dissimilar materials, joints must accommodate movement without cracking or separating.

Sealants are not permanent. Over time, UV exposure, thermal cycling, pollution, and physical movement cause them to harden, crack, or lose adhesion. When this happens, the joint is no longer weatherproof.

Why Does Commercial Building Sealant Fail?

Sealant failure on commercial buildings is rarely caused by one factor alone. The most common causes include:

  • UV degradation: prolonged sunlight exposure breaks down the polymer structure of many sealant types, causing cracking and surface chalking
  • Thermal movement: buildings expand and contract with temperature changes. If the sealant specification is not matched to the expected joint movement, it will eventually tear away from the substrate
  • Incorrect installation: sealant applied to damp, dusty, or unprepared surfaces will not bond correctly and will fail prematurely
  • Age: most commercial sealants have a service life of between 10 and 25 years, depending on exposure conditions and product specification
  • Substrate incompatibility: using the wrong sealant type on aluminium curtain walling, structural glass, or UPVC frames causes adhesion failure

Once a sealant joint fails, even a small gap can allow significant water ingress during heavy rainfall, particularly on high-level glazing where water tracks along building faces.

How Long Does Mastic Sealant Last on a Commercial Building?

Service life varies by product type, application quality, and building exposure. The table below gives a general guide:

Sealant TypeTypical UseApproximate Service Life
SiliconeGlazing, curtain walling, structural seals15 to 25 years
PolyurethaneExpansion joints, concrete, masonry10 to 20 years
PolysulfideInsulating glass units, structural glazing10 to 15 years
Acrylic / ButylLow-movement joints, internal use5 to 10 years

Note: service life figures are a general guide. Actual performance depends on exposure conditions, substrate quality, and installation standard. A qualified glazing specialist can assess the condition of existing sealant during a site survey.

What Are the Signs That Mastic Sealant Needs Replacing?

Visible sealant deterioration on the exterior of a commercial building is not always obvious from ground level. The most commonly reported signs that prompt a mastic repair programme include:

  • Visible cracking, chalking, or shrinkage along glazing joints
  • Water staining inside the building beneath glazed areas
  • Condensation between glass panes, indicating seal failure within the insulating glass unit
  • Draughts or cold spots near glazed facades
  • Darkening or discolouration of sealant lines, indicating moisture ingress behind the joint
  • Sealant pulling away from the frame or substrate at the edges

Many of these signs are only clearly visible at close range, which is why rope access inspections are an effective way to assess sealant condition across a building facade without the cost and disruption of scaffolding.

How Is Commercial Mastic and Sealant Repair Carried Out?

Step 1: Site Survey and Condition Assessment

A qualified technician inspects the building facade to map all failed or at-risk sealant joints. This is typically done via rope access on multi-storey commercial buildings, allowing the team to examine joints up close across the full height of the facade.

Step 2: Old Sealant Removal

Existing sealant is fully removed using cutting tools and solvents. The substrate must be completely clear of old material before new sealant is applied. Partial overcoating without removal is not a lasting solution and is not a practice GLRE carries out.

Step 3: Surface Preparation

Joint faces are cleaned, dried, and treated with a primer appropriate to the substrate. Backer rod is installed where required to control sealant depth and ensure correct joint geometry. Proper preparation is the single most important factor in sealant longevity.

Step 4: Sealant Application

Fresh sealant is applied in a continuous, void-free bead and tooled to achieve full contact with both joint faces. Product selection is matched to the substrate, expected movement, and building exposure conditions.

Step 5: Quality Check and Documentation

Completed joints are inspected and a condition report is issued. Where a programme of works covers multiple elevations, photographic records are provided so the building owner or facilities manager has a clear audit trail.

Why Is Rope Access Used for High-Level Mastic Repair?

On multi-storey commercial buildings, rope access glazing is the standard access method for mastic and sealant work above the first floor. IRATA-qualified rope access technicians can access any point on a building facade without the lead time, cost, and footprint of a full scaffold.

The practical advantages for mastic and sealant repair specifically include:

  • Access to individual failed joints without mobilising access equipment across the whole building
  • Minimal disruption to building occupants and ground-level activity
  • Ability to work on complex or irregular facades where scaffolding is impractical
  • Faster mobilisation for urgent repairs where water ingress is causing active damage

All GLRE rope access teams hold IRATA certification, which is the internationally recognised standard for industrial rope access. Our technicians work to the same safety and quality standards across all sites, from rope access in Manchester to nationwide commercial glazing projects.

Should Commercial Buildings Have a Sealant Maintenance Programme?

A planned maintenance approach to mastic and sealant repair is significantly more cost-effective than reactive repair. Water ingress through failed joints causes secondary damage to internal finishes, insulation, structural elements, and mechanical systems that is far more expensive to remedy than the original sealant failure.

A regular inspection and re-sealing programme, typically as part of a broader building envelope maintenance schedule, allows building owners to budget predictably for sealant works and address deterioration before it causes damage.

For commercial landlords, property managers, and facilities teams, a documented sealant maintenance record also supports lease obligations, insurance requirements, and future dilapidations assessments.

How Do You Choose the Right Mastic and Sealant Contractor?

When appointing a contractor for commercial sealant repair, the following should be confirmed before works commence:

  • IRATA certification for rope access operatives where access at height is required
  • Evidence of relevant health and safety accreditations such as CHAS, SafeContractor, or Constructionline
  • Experience of working on similar building types and glazing systems
  • A clear method statement and risk assessment provided ahead of mobilisation
  • Product warranties from the sealant manufacturer where applicable
  • A written condition report on completion, including photographic records

GLRE holds CHAS Elite, SafeContractor, and Constructionline Platinum accreditations, and all rope access operatives are IRATA certified. We carry out a full condition survey before any sealant programme begins and issue a photographic completion report on every project.

Ready to arrange a mastic and sealant survey for your building? Contact GLRE today to book a free site survey with our IRATA-qualified rope access team.

Contact

Get a free site survey, book today.

Our rope access team is ready to assist with your unique requirements and can pro-actively maintain your buildings external envelope to prevent costly premature replacement.
Contact Form

GLRE © All Rights Reserved 2026

CRN. 5978752