Affordable architectural detail.
Posted on 27 August 2012

Tagged: Jamaica Plain, newel post, scrollwork, spray paint
Tagged: Jamaica Plain, newel post, scrollwork, spray paint
Several years ago I taught a workshop at the Boston Building Materials Coop (now Boston Building Resources) on residential exterior trim work. I don’t remember all the details of what I said, but I emphasized the importance of using materials that would survive exposure to New England weather without rotting. The villain of my story was the fast-grown #2 pine that is available cheaply (and temptingly) at many lumber yards along with the uninformed or unscrupulous carpenters who install it. I claimed that it rarely lasted more than 10 years without succumbing to fungi and other critters. It turned out that I was ruining the day of one of the workshop participants. Hundreds of feet of the pine in question had been installed on his…
Outside calipers, finely crafted from old-growth masonite.
No one seems to make really big calipers any more. We had to turn a couple of column bases for a porch in Newton, MA recently. The porch roof was up on jacks, though, so we didn’t want to peruse flea markets and tool auctions. Evan got the job done anyhow.
Tagged: lathe, masonite, turning. calipers
Mary Horst, of Horst Buchanan Architects, Inc., approached me in November of 2010 about reworking a stair in an early ’80s condominium in Jamaica Plain, MA. The original stair was open, giving the new homeowners visions of late-night tumbles, and the design had not aged well. Budget and logistics required that the framework of the stair remain, but Mary wanted to add risers and half walls, and eliminate the oak balustrade. The biggest challenge of the job would be fabricating a new wall-mounted handrail. Mary’s new design required a continuous, smoothly curving handrail with no visible joints. Because the stair transitioned from straight rise to curving rise and back again, the handrail would have to change pitch in addition to following the curve of…
Tagged: curved work, epoxy, handrail, Jamaica Plain, lamination, Stair
We’ve gotten a chance to do some fun work lately — curved handrail, walnut tables in the style of Nakashima — but it seems that the formula for getting good press is staining some plywood bright blue. My friend David Doyle, longtime owner of the bookstore Rhythm and Muse, called me recently about making a table and drink rails for his new tapas restaurant cum vinyl haven Tres Gatos (a reference to beloved family members, not menu items…). The goal was to make a big impact on a light budget, and Dave fell in love with an intense blue stain from Trans Tint. The stain, plus shellac and a UV-blocking top coat from Target Coatings gave us what we were hoping for: The funny…
Tagged: Blue table, David Doyle, Jamaica Plain, restaurant, Rhythm & Muse, Trans Tint, Tres Gatos
For the first time in living memory, we all managed to gather in one place, and what a place! a wonderful Jamaica Plain restaurant called Vee Vee, owned by our friends Dan and Kristen Valachovic. Unfortunately, the event that finally motivated us to gather en masse was John’s going-away dinner. Today was his last day (tiling to the end!), and Saturday he starts the drive back to San Diego, via Vermont, to honor his love of non-Euclidean geometry. Best wishes and happy travels to John, and we hope to lure him back to the fairer coast soon.
Tagged: Vee Vee
The newspapers in New England have been filled with stories of roofs (rooves?) collapsing under their accumulated snow loads this winter; it’s become grimly routine. So I was somewhat heartened to see a less catastrophic version of the phenomenon in a photo Chris Hosford (one of my architectural collaborators) sent me today: We’ve gotten used to stories of decks collapsing under the weight of large numbers of drunken party guests, so perhaps the snow did these homeowners a favor. To the forensics, though! What happened to this little side deck? As we’ve seen before, carpentry can be (crudely) reduced to a battle between building materials and gravity. For decks, there are usually two anti-gravitational systems: the posts which rest on some kind…
Tagged: deck, porch, snow load, structural failure, winter
First, an apology: A weblog without photos is an impoverished thing. However, the concrete truck came at 8am on the morning after Thanksgiving, and we knew that we would only be allowed 15 minutes per yard of concrete, after which we would be charged $3/min. We (John B and I) ended up placing almost 4 yards in a bit less than 45 minutes, and picking up the camera never crossed our minds. Nothing weird or disastrous happened, though, and by Monday morning, we had footings on which to set the remedial framing. From there, it was just like playing with a big erector set, except that the critical beam was too long to fit into the building the normal way. We ended up…
Tagged: carriage house, dead bird, footing, LVL, Milton, structural work
The chimney wasn’t so good. It was failing structurally, and someone had made a half-hearted attempt to splint it back into soundness with a couple blocks of wood, screw hooks, and a turnbuckle. It was also on the small side — only 16 inches square, but was supporting large hearths above — and the house was sagging around it. There was also a question of respect. I make no claims at knowing the electrical code, but I’m pretty sure it’s not recommended to run wires down the center of a chimney. Given all thie, the clients asked us to remove it, shore up the house around it, and replace the non-functional fireplaces with something more user-friendly. While the weather was still reasonably…
Musti and Luc, on the clock.