Contact Mike or Nicole and give them words of encouragement.

Nicole Holden : mwestpress@gmail.com Mike Holden : mholdendesign@yahoo.com



Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Facade Restoration; Phase Two

OK - I couldn't resist! I just had to see what the Bay View Bungalow will look like after the facade restoration is complete, so I photoshopped the gable, eaves, etc. Notice we also have copper gutters - there is paint available for this exact purpose; it has real copper in it and will develop a patina over time. Our modest bungalow would not have had copper gutters, but they would look a lot better than the painted aluminum we have now. Also note how much better the house looks without shutters. It makes me want to climb out on the snow-covered roof and rip them off right now!

future state
 
current state

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Phase one of the Facade restoration Complete

The best part of any home restoration blog is always the before-and-after shots. Since the completion of the large storm window marks the completion of Phase-One of the facade restoration, we figure it's time to share.

What constitutes phase one you ask? What we're calling phase one is basically the facade from the porch roof down. This spring we'll tackle Phase-Two; everything from the roof-line up. This will include removing the awful '60s shutters, painting everything, and installing period correct screens (partly to hide the white vinyl replacement windows).



In the mean time however, we're quite pleased with the transformation. As a side note, any true home restorer would point out how "incorrect" the asbestos siding is, but removing it and restoring the original siding is just beyond what we're willing to tackle (I've seriously thought about it, but I'd rather stay married) Besides, all things considered, I think it looks OK; it's in great shape, it holds paint well, and with all of the other "correct" details, it's very easy for the casual observer to look past and see an "original" bungalow.

And, just because, here are some progress shots of the windows / trim:

The window and trim as it looked after removing the '60s era shutters. Note the brown overspray at the edge of the shutter outline; the whole house was painted this color in the '80s. Our neighbor said they got overspray all over his house when they did it.

There were so many layers of paint that had been applied over cracked peeling paint
that the only thing to do was strip the trim back to bare wood in most places.
Tedious work with the heat gun, but well worth the trouble.

The same section as it appears today; still some paint work to be done above the
green trim. The original storms were also stripped and repainted, including
the original hardware.

Building a Storm Window the old-fashioned way

In addition to replacing original wood porch columns with faux wrought iron, the other architectural bastardization that was common in the 1960's was to remove original double-hung windows and replace them with a "picture window". The Bay View Bungalow unfortunately fell victim to this trend in the name of "modernization".

What we are left with, is an expanse of glass on the front of the house that looks very out of scale with the two original windows that flank it. (this would have originally been a bank of four matching leaded glass windows; the two in the center were removed and replaced with one window). The icing on the cake is the Craptastic aluminum storm window that was installed over it.

picture window with aluminum storm
Since recreating and installing the missing windows was out of the budget, our solution was to build a traditional wood storm window to match those on the original windows and break up the huge expanse of glass by incorporating divided lites (individual panes) to give it a period-correct look. This would at least create the illusion that the larger, center window was an original feature.

In order to really "sell" the illusion, we built the new storm window in exactly the same way it would have been built in 1930; meaning we built it to last, with mortise and tenon joinery (alright - and, yes, a few lap-joints), real, rather than applied, muntins (window "dividers"), and glass held in place with glazing points and sealed with traditional glazing compound.

Rather than bore you with the whole process, I will instead point to this person's blog post that I used as a guide in creating our window. Below are a few highlights from our window build.

open mortise-and-tenon joint
muntins before being glued in place
gluing everything up
chiseling out the corners of the window pane channels
   

Kirby and the finished frame
priming the frame
glazing the panes
finished window installed

We are thrilled with the results! In the spring we'll take the window down and paint the glazing compound to match. (It will take quite a long time for the putty to cure - and can't be painted before then)







Update: this blog is not dead (just very neglected)

What's been going on at the Bay View Bungalow? Well, we've been busy. There have been lots of small projects (and a few big ones). Mostly though, we've been busy with this guy:

Kirby at about 8 weeks
Kirby is our new addition to the family - he is a (now) 8 month old Welsh Corgi and has kept us very occupied. So, between him and life as a whole, we've been letting the blog languish for far too long.

So, we intend to remedy our lack of updates in short order with some posts on recent progress (although we haven't been keeping up the Blog, we've been documenting the progress by taking LOTS of photos) Stay tuned...