GirlNeedsGarage
Member
Hello, I'm brand new here. Go easy on me.
I have a historic 103-year-old house that I am restoring. Unfortunately, I have a POS garage from the 1990s to go with it. The garage wasn't even built to code, as far as I can tell (no man door for starters which I know is code here). I'm near Cleveland, OH btw.
My current garage is 20x20 on a slab with a gable roof. The slab has a little concrete wall going all the way around, about 3.25-3.5" tall that the framed walls sit on. It is framed on 24" centers (problem #1). The garage door opening is 15' 10" wide by 6' 5" tall (with (2) 2x12" for a header). The framed wall is 7' 3" tall, the total height, to the floor is about 7' 7.5".
This structure is holding up just fine but the roof has totally deteriorated and there are holes in it now, including a big one where a branch landed on it. The siding is made out of some kind of particle board that just absorbs moisture, swells up, and falls apart.
A few years back, I disassembled an old carriage house and brought all the parts home. Carriage doors, ship lap siding, 2x4s, etc. I originally planned on building an entirely new garage, using these parts. Now, I just want to keep my existing foundation/footprint and make mine waterproof again and prettier. I intend to use the ship lap siding and carriage doors in the makeover as well as brand new slate I have leftover from doing a new roof on my house 3 years ago.
This presents several problems. #1, I assume 24" centers are not good enough to hold up slate? I originally figured I'd remedy this by just adding a new stud between the existing studs, making it 12" oc. I know that'd be overkill but it seemed like the easiest way. Then, I wanted to tear down the entire roof structure and build a steeper pitched roof (mine is probably 4/12) to allow for some attic storage. I also want exposed rafter tails on the overhangs (maybe 12"). Currently, there are no overhangs.
I also took the old side door and a window out of the carriage house, to add to my doorless, windowless garage. Basically, I want the garage to look like it belongs here.
Here is problem #2. These big, beautiful carriage doors (there are 4 of them) are about 50" wide x 8' tall. Making them taller than my existing walls, let alone the door opening. 15" taller, to be exact. Obviously, I'm not cutting that off the doors.
At this point, unless anyone has any better suggestions, I think the only way is to just start over. Build new walls 8 or 9 ft tall, 16" oc. I was trying to avoid that but I'm not seeing another way to open the door opening tall enough for these carriage doors.
Now, my question is, what is code for the header for a 16' opening? This header will be supporting the weight of these 4 giant, heavy carriage doors, plus the slate roof. The current header is (2) 2x12 and it is over 15' wide. Will I be able to reuse that? Or do I need to add another 2x12 and make the front wall out of 2x6s? And if I have to build it out of 2x6s, is it ok to just build that wall out of 2x6 or do I have to do the other walls as well?
Any help is appreciated. I'm at the very beginning planning stages right now. Hoping to start the project in a couple months.
I have a historic 103-year-old house that I am restoring. Unfortunately, I have a POS garage from the 1990s to go with it. The garage wasn't even built to code, as far as I can tell (no man door for starters which I know is code here). I'm near Cleveland, OH btw.
My current garage is 20x20 on a slab with a gable roof. The slab has a little concrete wall going all the way around, about 3.25-3.5" tall that the framed walls sit on. It is framed on 24" centers (problem #1). The garage door opening is 15' 10" wide by 6' 5" tall (with (2) 2x12" for a header). The framed wall is 7' 3" tall, the total height, to the floor is about 7' 7.5".
This structure is holding up just fine but the roof has totally deteriorated and there are holes in it now, including a big one where a branch landed on it. The siding is made out of some kind of particle board that just absorbs moisture, swells up, and falls apart.
A few years back, I disassembled an old carriage house and brought all the parts home. Carriage doors, ship lap siding, 2x4s, etc. I originally planned on building an entirely new garage, using these parts. Now, I just want to keep my existing foundation/footprint and make mine waterproof again and prettier. I intend to use the ship lap siding and carriage doors in the makeover as well as brand new slate I have leftover from doing a new roof on my house 3 years ago.
This presents several problems. #1, I assume 24" centers are not good enough to hold up slate? I originally figured I'd remedy this by just adding a new stud between the existing studs, making it 12" oc. I know that'd be overkill but it seemed like the easiest way. Then, I wanted to tear down the entire roof structure and build a steeper pitched roof (mine is probably 4/12) to allow for some attic storage. I also want exposed rafter tails on the overhangs (maybe 12"). Currently, there are no overhangs.
I also took the old side door and a window out of the carriage house, to add to my doorless, windowless garage. Basically, I want the garage to look like it belongs here.
Here is problem #2. These big, beautiful carriage doors (there are 4 of them) are about 50" wide x 8' tall. Making them taller than my existing walls, let alone the door opening. 15" taller, to be exact. Obviously, I'm not cutting that off the doors.
At this point, unless anyone has any better suggestions, I think the only way is to just start over. Build new walls 8 or 9 ft tall, 16" oc. I was trying to avoid that but I'm not seeing another way to open the door opening tall enough for these carriage doors.
Now, my question is, what is code for the header for a 16' opening? This header will be supporting the weight of these 4 giant, heavy carriage doors, plus the slate roof. The current header is (2) 2x12 and it is over 15' wide. Will I be able to reuse that? Or do I need to add another 2x12 and make the front wall out of 2x6s? And if I have to build it out of 2x6s, is it ok to just build that wall out of 2x6 or do I have to do the other walls as well?
Any help is appreciated. I'm at the very beginning planning stages right now. Hoping to start the project in a couple months.
Last edited:

