A technical service focused on one specific problem: waterproofing failures in accessible terraces and walkable rooftops in high-rise residential buildings across Argentina.
Waterproofing failure in a high-rise building terrace is not simply a maintenance issue — it becomes a conflict between neighbors, a legal and administrative challenge for the building consortium, and a source of ongoing structural damage if not addressed correctly.
Denxodi's service is designed around the specific technical and administrative realities of high-rise buildings in Argentina. The work is not limited to applying a new membrane. It begins with a diagnostic process that establishes exactly what is failing and why, and it ends with documented evidence that the work was completed effectively — a record the consortium can keep on file.
This focus on documentation is not incidental. Building consortiums in Argentina operate under a shared governance structure where decisions about common areas require transparency and accountability. A filmed flood test and a written technical report provide that accountability in concrete form.
No waterproofing solution is proposed before the source and extent of the problem has been established through a controlled flood test. The diagnosis determines the scope of the work, not the other way around.
Applying a new membrane over a failed one is a temporary measure that typically fails again within a short period. The standard approach involves complete removal of the existing system before any new waterproofing is applied.
Drainage slope is corrected as a standard part of every intervention — not as an optional add-on. Water that cannot drain from the surface is one of the primary causes of premature membrane failure.
Every completed intervention ends with a filmed flood test and a written technical report. These documents are provided to the building consortium as a permanent record of the work performed and its verified outcome.
Denxodi is based at Edificio Drago in Luján de Cuyo, Mendoza. The service is oriented toward high-rise residential buildings — typically buildings of five or more floors — where accessible terraces and walkable rooftops are common areas managed by the building consortium.
The Mendoza region presents specific waterproofing challenges: significant thermal amplitude between summer and winter, intense solar radiation at altitude, and periodic rainfall events that can rapidly reveal the condition of any waterproofing system.
For building administrators and consortium managers dealing with terrace infiltration, the service is available for consultation by phone or email before any site visit is scheduled.
The service is oriented toward buildings of five or more floors where accessible terraces form part of the common areas managed by the consortium.
All work is documented in a format suitable for the building's administrative records — filmed tests, written reports, and material specifications.
Based in Luján de Cuyo, Mendoza. Available for consultation and site assessment throughout the region and by arrangement for other provinces.
Contact us to describe the situation and arrange a diagnostic visit. We can discuss the problem and the process before any commitment is made.