Skip to main content

Privacy policy

Privacy policy

Our Commitment:
Our Privacy Policy was developed as an extension of our commitment to combine the highest-quality products and services with the highest level of integrity in dealing with our clients and partners. The Policy is designed to assist you in understanding how we collect, use and safeguard the personal information you provide to us and to assist you in making informed decisions when using our site and our products and services. This statement will be continuously assessed against new technologies, business practices and our customers' needs.

What Information Do We Collect ?
When you visit our Web site you may provide us with two types of information: personal information you knowingly choose to disclose that is collected on an individual basis and Web site use information collected on an aggregate basis as you and others browse our Web site.


Email Information
In addition to providing the foregoing information to our partners, if you choose to correspond further with us through email, we may retain the content of your email messages together with your email address and our responses. We provide the same protections for these electronic communications that we employ in the maintenance of information received by mail and telephone.


How Do We Use the Information That You Provide to Us?
Broadly speaking, we use personal information for purposes of administering our business activities, providing customer service and making available other products and services to our customers and prospective customers. Occasionally, we may also use the information we collect to notify you about important changes to our Web site, new services and special offers we think you will find valuable. The lists used to send you product and service offers are developed and managed under our traditional corporate standards designed to safeguard the security and privacy of our customers’ personal information. As a customer, you will be given the opportunity, at least once annually, to notify us of your desire not to receive these offers.


What Are Cookies?
Cookies are a feature of Web browser software that allows Web servers to recognize the computer used to access a Web site. Cookies are small pieces of data that are stored by a user’s Web browser on the user’s hard drive. Cookies can remember what information a user accesses on one Web page to simplify subsequent interactions with that Web site by the same user or to use the information to streamline the user’s transactions on related Web pages. This makes it easier for a user to move from Web page to Web page and to complete commercial transactions over the Internet. Cookies should make your online experience easier and more personalized.



How Do We Use Information We Collect from Cookies?
We use Web site browser software tools such as cookies and Web server logs to gather information about our Web site users’ browsing activities, in order to constantly improve our Web site and better serve our customers. This information assists us to design and arrange our Web pages in the most user-friendly manner and to continually improve our Web site to better meet the needs of our customers and prospective customers.



Notice of New Services and Changes

Occasionally, we may also use the information we collect to notify you about important changes to our Web site, new services and special offers we think you will find valuable. As our client, you will be given the opportunity to notify us of your desire not to receive these offers by clicking on a response box when you receive such an offer or by sending us a request.

Disclose Information to Outside Parties
We may provide aggregate information about our customers, sales, Web site traffic patterns and related Web site information to our affiliates or reputable third parties, but this information will not include personally identifying data, except as otherwise provided in this Privacy Policy.


Legally Compelled Disclosure of Information
We may disclose information when legally compelled to do so, in other words, when we, in good faith, believe that the law requires it or for the protection of our legal rights.


Other Web Sites Linked to Our Web Site
We are not responsible for the practices employed by Web sites linked to or from our Web site nor the information or content contained therein. Often links to other Web sites are provided solely as pointers to information on topics that may be useful to the users of our Web site. 
 Please remember that when you use a link to go from our Web site to another Web site, our Privacy Policy is no longer in effect. Your browsing and interaction on any other Web site, including Web sites which have a link on our Web site, is subject to that Web site’s own rules and policies. Please read over those rules and policies before proceeding.


Your Consent
By using our Web site you consent to our collection and use of your personal information as described in this Privacy Policy. If we change our privacy policies and procedures, we will post those changes on our Web site to keep you aware of what information we collect, how we use it and under what circumstances we may disclose it.

Copyright roofconstruction-terminology.blogspot.com

Popular posts from this blog

What Are The Different Types Of Roofs?

What Are The Different Types Of Roofs? The roof is the uppermost portion of the building which protects the building from rain, wind, and sun. Various types of roofs used may be divided broadly into three types: 1. Flat roofs 2. Pitched roofs 3. Shells and folded plates. Flat roofs are used in plains where rainfall is less and climate is moderate. Pitched roofs are  preferred wherever rainfall is more. Shells and folded plate roofs are used to cover large  column-free areas required for auditoriums, factories, etc. Brief description of these roofs is  presented below: 1. Flat Roofs These roofs are nearly flat. However slight slope (not more than 10°) is given to  drain out the rainwater. All types of upper-story floors can serve as flat roofs. Many times  top of these roofs are treated with waterproofing materials-like mixing waterproofing  chemicals in concrete, providing Coba concrete. With the advent of reliable waterproofing  techniques, such roofs are constructed e

The Common Rafter and Purlin Roof

The Common Rafter and Purlin Roof As a civil engineer or roof contractor, you should aware of the construction of a roof and trussed roofs also types of roof construction in the industry. So, here our new article about roof rafter and purlin roof related to roof construction. The structure is most commonly used where there is a gable at both ends of the roof and is frequently to be found on terraced houses, as indicated in the below picture. This simple form of roof is illustrated in below picture. Its construction has been included here because of the now very common refurbishment of such houses. The wall plates are often simply bedded on mortar on either the inner skin of a cavity wall or, as is often the case with older terraced houses, on the inside edge of a solid 9 in. brick wall. Wall plates should be half lapped where they meet, and should not be less than 75 mm wide and 50 mm thick. They should be treated with preservative. Below picture shows typical plate co

The Coupled Roof, Ceilings And Trusses

The Coupled Roof, Ceilings and Trusses M oving off from early roof forms that provided each wall and roof in one unit, succeeding development showed a real roof designed on masonry or timber walls. the only type of roof was a coupled roof, consisting of 2 lengths of timber bearing against one another at the highest and resting on a plate at their feet. The timbers, known as couples, were pegged along at the highest with timber dowels and were equally pegged or spiked to the plate. The term ‘couple’ was used until the fifteenth century once the terms ‘spar’ or ‘rafter’ began to be used. The term rafter in fact continues to be wont to describe the piece of timber during a roof spanning from the ridge to the place. paced regarding four hundred millimeters apart tied solely by horizontal binders and tile battens. the easy couple was adequate for tiny span dwellings and steep pitches, however the outward poke force at the feet of the rafters caused stability issues with the walls