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What is the proper term

The Cobbler

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Hi all.

I have applied for permit to build a 400sqft garage. Had a colleague do the drawings for me . His forte is store fixtures, wall units etc. all custom stuff for big dollars. He doesn't do any framing.
He did a great job on the drawings, the Building Dept remarked on them even.

One thing I am wondering, It's a gable roof, but along the front will be a ( apron for lack of other words) that ties into the roof line, and there will be trough on it. So the garage will have gable roof, with overhangs down the sides, and the same overhang along the front. trough will be on both sides and front.

whats the term for that front overhang section?
I want to call it an apron or Brow or????

thanks
 
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The Cobbler

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trough aka eaves trough.
there would be a small roof section on the gable end that is shingled with the same overhang as the side walls . the eaves trough would be on the front gable and both sides. .

Thanks Ray.
 

sb7979

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It's an eave return.

eave-return.jpg
 

sb7979

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ah, I see what you are describing is a little different than the pic i posted. I would call yours a continuous return, but I see some references online calling it a "pent roof".
 

6768rogues

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Around here they call it a belt line. I put it on the front of my building which faces south. It keeps water from shedding off the building wall in front of the doors and provides shade for the door openings when the sun is at its highest, in hot weather. I also put lights in it to cast light down the front of the building.
 
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larry4406

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On the houses my company builds, we call the short ones "eyebrows or returns". If it runs the full width of the gable, we call it "water table" (not to be confused with masonry water table).
 

404

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A very pretty detail, but fussy to install and waterproof correctly. If you can live without it leave it out, it will be a leak point.
 
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The Cobbler

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A..... If you can live without it leave it out, it will be a leak point.

thanks for your input

there's several reasons why I had it included in the plans.
in no particular order
1) to break up visually the fact that the garage is going to be high.
2) more consistent with the house ( and others in the area) when viewed from the street
3) give a bit of a water shield to the garage door when loading/unloading in rain
4) cosmetics

I don't foresee a problem with leaking, flashing behind the siding and all is good. My neighbors garage built in the 50's is done this way & never had an issue as far as I know
 

FFRKing

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When I built my house, the builder referred to the short ones as "eyebrows" and all the way across was an "apron".
Depending on the available gap above the garage door is how he referred which one to do.

Chris
 

Firebird 1

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30+ year contractor here. We call the short, a "return", when they run all the way across an "eyebrow". I personally think they make a gable wall look "classier". breaks up the expanse. As far as building and flashing, yes it much easier quicker and cheaper to go strait up with the wall, but they are not hard to build and no harder to flash than any other detail on the roof. If one is concerned about keeping the water out and flashing it properly they shouldn't be in the roofing business.
 
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