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cupola on Garage?

bimmer1980

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York, PA
Any of you guys install a cupola on your garage?

Did you install one with louvers or with windows?

Did it figure into the overall permitted height of the garage or was it considered cosmetic?

Post some pictures if you have one... I'm interested in what it looks like and how it was installed.
 
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Cage

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Aug 3, 2010
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My garage has one on it, no louvers or windows and that resulted in water damage. It has also caused the roof to sag, my garage is really old so there's many factors at play but a contractor told me it was definitely causing problems. I`m removing it ASAP. All I can say is make sure you make it so rain doesn`t get in and make sure your roof is properly supported. Just my two cents.
 

ForceFed70

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Hope I'm not the only one that had to google "cupola". Sounds like you're planning a very nice garage!
 
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metal1313

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clinton NJ
i dont have one but i plan on adding one to my garage soon. there an amish guy who makes them, and one of his standard sizes fits an attic fan quite nicely
 

BillK

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Beautiful Southern Maryland
Brad,
I am getting ready to put a new roof on my detached garage and was seriously thinking of putting a cupola up. Partially for appearance, and partly for the ventilation. I am doing a metal roof and I am not real sure about using a ridge vent with the metal. Plus I just think the cupola looks neat :)
 

dan-

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Mar 9, 2008
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i dont have one but i plan on adding one to my garage soon. there an amish guy who makes them, and one of his standard sizes fits an attic fan quite nicely


Do you have info on the Amish guy? Website - Phone number -pager number- email address-:bounce:
 

Bull

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MA
I've got one. Windows on three sides, vent on the fourth (west) side.

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Teach

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Oct 19, 2009
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I've been thinking about doing a pretty large one...say 4x4...maybe with bench seats on two sides inside. I'd like to have removable panels...windows for half the year, and louvers for the warmer half....even if two windows were permanent and the other two could be swapped out for louvered panels. I'm guessing either I'll have to build it or it will cost a fortune. Has anyone ever seen one like I am describing?
 

Stuart in MN

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Minneapolis
Not a garage, but this place is up the block from my house - it has a pretty cool cupola, with a seating area up there.

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brownbagg

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Mar 20, 2006
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why, why, why, make its look girly, shop are made to work in, manly stuff
 

akdiesel

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Wasilla, AK
I have been planning one for a couple of years now. Did some research on them and there is a certain size that is ascetic for the size of roof. So a 40' x 60' shop would need to have about a 4' cupola. I only want it for a shop fan that would covered by the cupola and be used to vent exhaust, welding fumes, etc... as well as house a weather vane.
 

bigred292

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Rhode Island
Not a garage, but this place is up the block from my house - it has a pretty cool cupola, with a seating area up there.

attachment.php

Don't think that's a cupola- it's called a widows' walk.
There are quite a few houses here in New England with them- legend is that the sailors wife would keep watch up there for their husbands coming home from sea.
Sometimes they didn't come home- which would make them widows.
 

FJ 432

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Littleton Colorado
Don't think that's a cupola- it's called a widows' walk.
There are quite a few houses here in New England with them- legend is that the sailors wife would keep watch up there for their husbands coming home from sea.
Sometimes they didn't come home- which would make them widows.

I think a widow's walk is something different. I picture a narrow walkway along the top ridge that usually has a rod iron railing. I believe the picture would be a cupola.

Cool house!
 
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Larwyn

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Texas
Yep, the way I understand it, a widow's walk is more like a rooftop boardwalk, usually with a railing. Not much room for anybody to "walk" in a cupola.
 

bigred292

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Rhode Island
I guess we're different here in New England. I'd much rather be in a closed widows walk during a nor'easter- don't know about anyone else.
 

dirttracker18

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Slate River, ON
Mine are the same as Bull's.
SDC11470.jpg

SDC11374.jpg

Dude that is one awesome shop!!!!!

I had to opt for something simplier due to costs when I built mine but now I kind of wish I had waited and built something more architectually appealing.

Yours is right along the lines of what I would build next time, if there is a next time.
 

Kevin54

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Urbana, Ohio
Don't think that's a cupola- it's called a widows' walk.
There are quite a few houses here in New England with them- legend is that the sailors wife would keep watch up there for their husbands coming home from sea.
Sometimes they didn't come home- which would make them widows.

That's not a Widows Walk. Quite a few houses like that were designed for businessmen and Plantation owners, so they could go up and overlook what they owned. On plantations, the owners could go up and watch all of the workers out in the fields. In towns, businessmen could go up, look out and see their factory which was normally close by.

A widows walk is usually a large flat roofed home with a railing around it. Access to the roof was normally through the attic of the home. Some designs did have the windowed Cupola.

I did find this about it.

From Wikipedia:

A widow's walk also known as a "widow's watch" (or roofwalk) is a railed rooftop platform often with a small enclosed cupola frequently found on 19th century North American houses. A popular romantic myth holds that the platform was used to observe vessels at sea. The name is said to come from the wives of mariners, who would watch for their spouses' return, often in vain as the ocean took the lives of the mariners, leaving the women widows.[1] In other coastal communities, the platforms were called Captain's Walk, as they topped the homes of the more successful captains and supposedly ship owners and captains would use them to search the horizon for ships due in port.

However, there is little or no evidence that widow's walks were intended or regularly used to observe shipping. Widow's walks are in fact a standard decorative feature of Italianate architecture, which was very popular during the height of the Age of Sail in many North American coastal communities. The widow's walk is a variation of the Italianate cupola.[2] The Italianate cupola, also known as a "belvedere", was an important ornate finish to this style, although it was often high maintenance and prone to leaks.[3]

A widow's walk on a home overlooking a harbor in Massachusetts.

Beyond their use as viewing platforms, they are frequently built around the chimney of the residence, thus creating access to the structure. This allows the residents of the home to pour sand down burning chimneys in the event of a chimney fire in the hope of preventing the house from burning down.[4]
 

Stuart in MN

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Minneapolis
There are also some guidelines for determining the size of a cupola, so that it looks 'right' - too small or too large will look funny compared to the rest of the building. I don't remember the particulars but I think it's a 1:10 ratio; if your garage is 30 feet long, the cupola should be about 3 feet square. An online search will probably turn up the exact figures.
 

sc3013

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Jan 16, 2009
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southern Indiana
I had to have one so I would have a place for my weather vane. This one is 4' sq., and that part of the barn is 36' by 40'. And it's louvered.
 
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bimmer1980

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York, PA
Fellows--I like the barns with cupolas. I also like the transom windows as well.

As much as I like the idea of a cupola on my garage, I think I'm going to have to skip it. It just might be overkill for what I have, and I want to get my roof on sometime in this century.........
 

wintermute

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Mount Vernon, WA
When I hear the word "cupola" I think "tank" :lol:
I'm mildly disappointed to find a lack of a remote machine gun mount and various sensors to hand targets off to the gunner …
M1a2_Commander_s_Cupola.jpg


Bimmer....I'm liking your B-24.
The avatar's a B-17 …G? I don't recall if any earlier models had the chin turret
 
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bimmer1980

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Yeah, my avatar is the EAA's Aluminum Overcast B-17. I was fortunate enough to get a ride on it a few years ago! That was awesome!!!!
 

1931S/X

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i have always wanted to put on on my detached garage but thought it might look a little funny with a hip roof and only about a 3' long ridge. it had no vent at all for all these years and when i did the new roof i put a ridge vent on but it really isnt enough. id like to put a coupala with a fan.
 

geologist

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When I hear the word "cupola" I think "tank" :lol:
I'm mildly disappointed to find a lack of a remote machine gun mount and various sensors to hand targets off to the gunner …

HAIL! HAIL! ARTILLERY! King of Battle, follow me!
 
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