A mono-pitch roof is a roof with a single sloping surface that runs from the high side down to the low side. Unlike a gable roof (two sloping surfaces), a mono-pitch roof has no ridge. It is the simplest roof form and therefore popular for extensions, garden buildings, and modern architecture.

Characteristics

Property Mono-pitch roof
Number of roof surfaces 1
Ridge None
Construction Simple
Drainage To one side
Roof pitch 5-30° (depending on roof covering)

When do you choose a mono-pitch roof?

Roof pitch

The minimum pitch depends on the roof covering:

Roof covering Minimum pitch
EPDM 1.5° (1-2%)
Bitumen
Corrugated sheets (steel/plastic)
Roof tiles (concrete) 25°
Roof tiles (clay) 30°

With a low-pitch mono-pitch roof (under 5°), it is often finished as a “flat roof” with EPDM or bitumen.

Construction

A mono-pitch roof is structurally simple:

1. High wall — The rear (or upper) wall is higher than the front one

2. Wall plates — A wall plate on each wall

3. Rafters — Run from the high wall plate to the low wall plate

4. Roof decking or purlins — On the rafters, depending on the roof covering

No trusses are needed (those are for triangular roof shapes). The rafters do all the work.

Mono-pitch roof vs. gable roof

Mono-pitch roof Gable roof
Surfaces 1 2
Construction Simpler More complex (trusses)
Drainage To one side To two sides
Loft space Less More
Material costs Lower Higher
Wind More vulnerable (large surface) More stable

Points to consider

Related terms

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