andyvh1959
Well-known member
Took advantage of some unusual Wisconsin warm November weather recently to finally rebuild the living room south wall of my 1973 built architect designed contemporary home. The south wall was a 17' span of doubled 2x12s, two 8' patio doors with one 6" wooden post with NO anti-rot/flashing/coatings applied when first built. 52 years of Wisconsin weather caused considerable rot and the roof had sagged onto the patio doors which became part of the supporting structure.
With my hired constractor friend Jake (thats him in the picture) got my 10ton bottle jack to lift the load off the rotted post, and the repairs. replacement of rotted wood, and new framing started. What was once a single plain wood post with NO moisture abatement is now three tripled 2x4 pressure treated posts on a new pressure treated sill. with coatings and flashings applied. The prehung door is fully installed and the windows positioned. I used 2" styrofoam sheet to enclose it for the night and keep out critters. Now I can finish the install with proper sheeting, flashing, etc.
It just baffles me that the architect, contractors/builders did nothing at all to plan for future moisture issues. Granted, it was built in 1973, but no application of any common flashing and sealers just shows disregard for proper design and work. Especially since the design of the house has much less than 12" overhangs, and the back of the house is constantly exposed to the prevailing west winds, rain, snow, ice etc common to Wisconsin weather. The door and windows are top end Windsor products (much like Marvin top line but not as expensive), fully aluminum clad with no seal dependent protection of the inner wood structure. Finally better.


With my hired constractor friend Jake (thats him in the picture) got my 10ton bottle jack to lift the load off the rotted post, and the repairs. replacement of rotted wood, and new framing started. What was once a single plain wood post with NO moisture abatement is now three tripled 2x4 pressure treated posts on a new pressure treated sill. with coatings and flashings applied. The prehung door is fully installed and the windows positioned. I used 2" styrofoam sheet to enclose it for the night and keep out critters. Now I can finish the install with proper sheeting, flashing, etc.
It just baffles me that the architect, contractors/builders did nothing at all to plan for future moisture issues. Granted, it was built in 1973, but no application of any common flashing and sealers just shows disregard for proper design and work. Especially since the design of the house has much less than 12" overhangs, and the back of the house is constantly exposed to the prevailing west winds, rain, snow, ice etc common to Wisconsin weather. The door and windows are top end Windsor products (much like Marvin top line but not as expensive), fully aluminum clad with no seal dependent protection of the inner wood structure. Finally better.


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