The stucco is the most expensive part of the garage. The builder said there is $8,000 worth of stucco (materials and labor) on my garage.
If there's 8K worth of stucco, trashing it would be 20% of the replacement cost of the garage.
I'm not trying to throw away 8K.
Sheathing the inside and transporting the stucco intact
may work just fine.
It will mean transporting walls that are substantially heavier than just the framing.
It will mean extra effort to not torque them at all during removal, transit, storage, return, and setting back in place.
It will present more challenges to you and your carpenters when it comes time to reassemble the garage.
There are certainly costs associated with sheathing it for transport including (but not limited to) what I've listed, that will exceed the cost and effort of simply moving the wall framing.
Nevertheless, it may be worth talking through with your team to decide what the best option is for your job.
To take the roof off in sections, you need to strip the shingles.
Right. That's why I mentioned that at the top of my post. We agree on that.
Roof sheathing is put on so the joints don't line up on any one truss. The sheets are staggered. To take off a section of roof, you'd need to cut the sheathing with a saw.
I should certainly hope everything you've said is true. If not, you'd have big problems.
When you went to put the roof back together you'd have weak joints everywhere. The sheathing would have to be replaced. So now you've essentially stripped the roof and replaced the sheathing and shingles like I originally suggested.
No Sir.
Please don't take this the wrong way, but obviously you're not a carpenter. Good for you. You're making enough money to afford this house and this project. That's something most carpenters aren't able to do.
The sheathing
does not have to be replaced.
Strip the shingles.
Cut the sheathing from the alley to the back yard (up and over the ridge)
right next to a truss.
When you go to reassemble, you're going to want to
sister either
a. blocking
or
b. an identical truss,
right next to that existing truss.
This blocking or new truss will serve to support the existing sheathing that became unsupported because of your cut.
If you use
(a) blocking, you will nail it to the existing truss.
If you use
(b)an additional truss- which I would do- you would nail that to the existing truss in the same fashion.
When you reassemble, the sheathing that has been cut is now supported.
If I were doing it, I would cut my first section out and move it off.
I would then put the
(b) new truss in place and nail the sheathing to it.
I would then nail 2x4's perpendicular to the bottom chord (as mentioned in my previous post), starting with the bottom chord of the
(b) new truss. These will help to keep the trusses and sheathing from racking during transport and storage.
It sounds like you're getting closer to an expedient way to get this done without losing your shirt or your sanity.
If you decide to go forward with it, I'd love to see a thread on it, as others have expressed. Good luck and thanks for starting this thread.
Dave