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🌍 Environmental Rules/Cool Roof Requirements

Cool Roof Requirements: Des Plaines vs Orland Park

How do cool roof requirements rules compare between Des Plaines, IL and Orland Park, IL?

Des Plaines and Orland Park have similar restriction levels.

Des Plaines, IL

Cook County

Few Restrictions

Cook County Building Code Ch. 32 adopts the International Energy Conservation Code without a separate cool-roof reach code. Reflective roofing is incentivized but not mandated outside Chicago, which has its own cool-roof requirement under the Chicago Energy Code.

View full Des Plaines rules β†’

Orland Park, IL

Cook County

Few Restrictions

Cook County Building Code Ch. 32 adopts the International Energy Conservation Code without a separate cool-roof reach code. Reflective roofing is incentivized but not mandated outside Chicago, which has its own cool-roof requirement under the Chicago Energy Code.

View full Orland Park rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactDes PlainesOrland Park
County reach codeNone beyond IECCNone beyond IECC
Code chapterCh. 32 Cook County BuildingCh. 32 Cook County Building
Climate zone5A no SRI mandate5A no SRI mandate
Chicago ruleSRI 78 low slope roofsSRI 78 low slope roofs

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Des Plaines FAQ

Do I need a cool roof in unincorporated Cook?

No. The county building code follows the 2018 IECC, which does not require reflective roofing in climate zone 5A. Cool roofs remain voluntary outside Chicago.

Are there any rebates for installing one?

ComEd and Nicor Gas occasionally offer cool-roof energy efficiency rebates for commercial properties. Cook County itself does not currently fund residential cool-roof incentives.

Orland Park FAQ

Do I need a cool roof in unincorporated Cook?

No. The county building code follows the 2018 IECC, which does not require reflective roofing in climate zone 5A. Cool roofs remain voluntary outside Chicago.

Are there any rebates for installing one?

ComEd and Nicor Gas occasionally offer cool-roof energy efficiency rebates for commercial properties. Cook County itself does not currently fund residential cool-roof incentives.

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