NorDel Garage
Well-known member
Brian, I just stumbled on this build thread.
Great job! I will be following along.
Good luck. KenO.
Great job! I will be following along.
Good luck. KenO.

Brian, I just stumbled on this build thread.
Great job! I will be following along.
Good luck. KenO.
Sad face on losing the tall narrow corner windows. Im guessing it was not feasible to replace them with custom windows? The siding looks great and looks like the house is really taking shape! Now it looks modern abstract.
Brian
Hello from a bit further east, I live in Wicomico County. Just stumbled across this thread now, awesome house and work, going to look great when it's done.
Boliermaker - thanks! I've looked at your thread and to be honest I dream of a garage with your bikes and those Merc outboards. Way cool.
Brian

Boliermakerfan -
The shed of the cottage we just sold had a 1975 Honda CB500T in it. I was scrambling to pack up the place due to some last-minute problems and unfortunately I had to let that bike go for free to a neighbor that could move it out. Your cool list remind me that I should get back to replacing it with something else.
Brian
Man, that *****. A Honda CB500T is on my future list! I have a CB500T tank already... I love parallel twins. Boy I sure do hope you don't have that flooding happen again. That would truly **** after all of the sweat equity you poured into that place.
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Yep, it hurt to let that one go. Wife was kind of glad so not a total loss.
BR
TODAY! Deck Prep
My contractor has finished prep work for the installation of the fiberglass decking. These pictures show clean decks and posts and railings and just presented so well I had to share them.
The fiberglass contractors started at 11:00 this morning and hopes to finish Saturday. I’ll post other pictures of the prep process and the finished product but in the meantime I’m enjoying this set of photos.
RickP,
For the most part the decks are not over living spaces. However, due to some odd cutouts of the basic square shapes (octagon room on 3rd floor) they are.
However, the flashing around 4x4 posts failed and water ruined post and beams.
We called another roofer and he suggested fiberglass. This system was about 30% more expensive but I think will be worth the extra cost. You are right about not being common for Eastern Shore - our guy is from the Jersey shore where this system is being used more and more.
TODAY! Deck Prep
These pictures show clean decks and posts and railings
My contractor was amazed at how strong it is. He was down there before fiberglass was completely finished and the installer pulled out a hammer and started pounding on it. My contractor was like, whoa, no and the installer laughed - it is tough stuff.Good call on using a contractor from NJ -- I've seen photos/videos of their glass work and it looks like they really know what they're doing. Our local contractor, on the other hand...
Thanks for the PDF of the deck layout -- the shape of the octagon area was confusing me from the photos. Are you covering both the 2nd and 3rd floor decks with glass? Our house has a similar deck-over-screen-porch setup, with a very small corner of the deck area over interior heated space.
If you have any photos, I'd be interested in seeing how they do the flashing around the posts -- cracking at the corners has been a huge problem for me. Are you wrapping the posts in trim later? That's one thing that really helped our post flashing stay waterproof (and hidden).
Thanks!
Some pictures that I've posted recently end up being sideways and I can't figure out how to correct it.
Any advice would be appreciated, thanks.
BR
Hey Brian,
Here's what worked for me:
- download photo from GJ album to hard drive
- open it in Windows Photo Viewer
- if the photo is sideways, right-click and rotate it
- close photo (if you want to check it, open the file again)
- delete original photo from GJ album
- upload rotated photo from hard drive
- update links in posts with the new photo address
It's a bit of a pain, and there's prolly an easier solution...
But since I'm not sure what caused the problem, I can't figure out a better way to fix it.
Figuring out that the fiberglass solution was the best one took lots of research, time, and contacting more ‘experts’ on flat roofs and decks than I can remember. I’d say overall only 1/3 called back and then only ½ showed up to look at the property even after we made specific plans to meet.
Anyway, we needed to remove the siding for about 6 inches off the deck in order for the fiberglass mat to be installed on the walls attached to the deck. One part that made this easier is that we did not install trim nor did we secure siding at bottom since we knew we were probably going to install some sort of flashing as part of deck covering.
That's just about exactly what I went through as well. Fiberglass decks are definitely not the norm around here.
Your decks are starting to look really good. I'll bet you can't wait for next spring so you can spend some time enjoying all the house improvements!
Third Floor Doors
I’m really happy to have these doors installed. The areas have been covered with nailed up pieces of plywood that let all sorts of creatures and even birds in. Nice to show up in a house without wasps, bees, bugs and birds flying through it.
......With that inspection done we were able to call in insulation company. That started early this morning so I hope to provide updates for that soon.
Oh - and Happy New Year, GJ!
