paredown
Well-known member
Our house was joined with a new subdivision, so what was the front (in picture) became the back, and the POs cut the back out of the garage so you could walk through from the new "front" to get to the original front door. I added a new front door several years ago.
But I was left with a carport--and putting up doors turned into a problem--issues with ceiling height/clearance, having two doors meet in the middle--plus, if double track were used, it would cut into the opening for the interior door into the garage, which is over-height. So I have had doors tacked up while I over-thought the problem.
I had a small breakthrough a couple of weeks ago--I need to be able to get through the garage--but I don't need a full sized door.
So I found these Andersen outswing door panels (FB Marketplace--cheap!), got some bargain door frame material, framed up the door (total PITA), and did temporary framing on the opening so it could be reversed later.
Finishing was 'what I had lying around'--base is some of that fake wood grain embossed ply, and I added the battens cut out of some salvage boards from the original siding. Had some of the original paint for the wall--and I also painted the door (though it is not recommended) to match the others on the house.
Some finishing left to go, including the threshold (it will be a bit of a kludge, since Andersen uses some proprietary profile that is pretty high--I've got a commercial door style to go in, and I may put a higher removable piece on it...
Anyways--not much to look at--but a big breakthrough for my "shop"!
Bonus--I've got nice light inside now too!
But I was left with a carport--and putting up doors turned into a problem--issues with ceiling height/clearance, having two doors meet in the middle--plus, if double track were used, it would cut into the opening for the interior door into the garage, which is over-height. So I have had doors tacked up while I over-thought the problem.
I had a small breakthrough a couple of weeks ago--I need to be able to get through the garage--but I don't need a full sized door.
So I found these Andersen outswing door panels (FB Marketplace--cheap!), got some bargain door frame material, framed up the door (total PITA), and did temporary framing on the opening so it could be reversed later.
Finishing was 'what I had lying around'--base is some of that fake wood grain embossed ply, and I added the battens cut out of some salvage boards from the original siding. Had some of the original paint for the wall--and I also painted the door (though it is not recommended) to match the others on the house.
Some finishing left to go, including the threshold (it will be a bit of a kludge, since Andersen uses some proprietary profile that is pretty high--I've got a commercial door style to go in, and I may put a higher removable piece on it...
Anyways--not much to look at--but a big breakthrough for my "shop"!
Bonus--I've got nice light inside now too!
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