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August 2017
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August 2017
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South Bend HPC
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Minutes
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1001364
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APPLICATION ITEMS: See attached. <br />DESCRIPTION OF PROPOSED PROJECT: Owner proposes: 1) Removal of existing cedar shake siding, encapsulation of <br />wood siding beneath with Tyvek house wrap, and installation of LP SmartSide engineered wood siding with a Quad 4" pattern to <br />replicate the existing siding. Comers will have 1x4 Smart trim. Siding will be primed and have two coats of exterior latex paint. <br />Cedar shake is in poor condition. Condition of wood siding under shake is unknown but can be assumed to have significant <br />maintenance needs due to shake application over top and decades of deferred maintenance. Staff requests an opportunity to <br />document siding underneath shake upon removal. 2) Removal of existing wood double hung 1/1 windows and replacement with <br />Andersen 400 Series vinyl -clad double -hung windows, sized to fit existing openings. Most windows have been mothballed for <br />decades; improper sizing of boarding has allowed water to enter. Oval window will be restored in-kind. 3) Demolish and fill in <br />cistern to the West side of existing rear door; remove rear porch, approximately 4'-0" x 21'4", and construction of a 14'x26' 2 - <br />story addition on the North side of existing home (see attached plans). Windows and siding will be continuous as installed on <br />main house. 4) Convert existing garage to living space. Remove existing shake siding and install SmartSide with 3" reveal to <br />match main house; remove and replace existing windows to match existing size and location; extend the existing gambrel roof <br />over a new continuous 6' porch on the west side (porch floor will be an extension of the concrete garage floor); support porch <br />with four 8" Turncraft 96"x8' unfinished fiberglass square columns; -install-a Therma-Tru Benchmark 6 -panel insulated <br />doo _5) Install a Sierra Pacific 8' dog-eared cedar picket fence and two swinging gates of the same material, to be <br />constructed with 2x4 and 4x4 treated posts. <br />PRESERVATION SPECIALIST REPORT: <br />Excerpt from February 16, 2017 10AM Steve Szaday <br />I am familiar with this property as I had personally on my own time helped the owner secure the property after multiple <br />break-ins over the last four years. Many of the boarding that had taken place prior to my involvement especially those done on <br />the second level utilized poorly fitting boards that allowed elements to enter at the top and settle on the window sashes and sills. <br />Luckily, there are storm windows on most of the windows. Most of those had been broken instead of the actual sash glass. I <br />counted ten storms with broken glass and six sashes with broken or missing glass. The structure has been without permanent <br />occupants or heat since the 1980s. Fortunately, the roof that was in place had no leaks and only minor water damage in the <br />plaster on second floor comers as a result of failing gutters. <br />The end result of my inspection is that one in three windows are in sound condition and not deteriorated beyond repair. Those <br />windows had properly fitted boarding and intact storms. They are all however, painted shut and without weight ropes. The <br />remainder have suffered severe structural damage and dry rot as a result of having elements enter but not having anywhere to <br />exit. The most damage is to the sashes and the sills. The side framework is structurally sound other than in those areas where <br />damage was sustained during break-ins. <br />The large fixed picture window in the front is broken with a large hole. (the glass is 1/4" thick and has a green hue) The <br />iconic oval window on the west side needs some frame attention but is in good shape. The windows located at the rear "mud - <br />room" addition have had most of the frame work broken out and currently have either plate glass or plexiglass in place. <br />Excerpt from June 19, 2017 9AM Steve Szaday <br />I photographed each window on second and first floors and there are 14 windows that he is looking to replace. The structure has <br />been boarded up for decades with the exception of six windows. This has helped the longevity of some windows but has caused <br />some damage to others where the boarding was improperly sized or installed. <br />I will break this down into groups based upon their condition: <br />(1) One window is completely gone and is merely a plexiglass non operable storm window <br />(2) Three windows have sturdy sashes that merely need re -roping and paint removal, however they are spread out <br />throughout the house. <br />(3) One window is the oval window that is completely deteriorated. The framework is dry -rotted and in places missing. <br />The glass is intact but not original as it is thinner than the other window panes in the house. <br />(4) Four windows have sashes that are in need of repairs but are salvageable. These windows were not boarded properly <br />but were sized short of the top allowing elements in and to be trapped. In addition, a galvanized sill wrap was installed <br />but not caulked. Water infiltration has seeped around the galvanized metal and has rotted out the sills and bottom plate. <br />I can apply pressure to the sill and have sponge -like movement. The interior plaster shows water damage off the lower <br />corners that runs to the base board trim. <br />(5) Three windows have structural damage due to abuse and vandalism(break-ins). These sashes could be repaired but <br />parting and interior stops are missing or broken and will need to be replaced <br />(6) One window has an upper sash that is painted in place and appears to be in good condition but is missing the lower <br />sash. <br />(7) One windows is a large picture window at front of house. This window is a single pane sash with 1/8" thick glass that is <br />broken. The glass measures approximately 74" inches wide by 50" inches tall. The sash is in good condition with the <br />exception of a piece of the interior which is broken at the point where the glass was broken from the outside. <br />The only intact storm window is the non-operable one where there is no sashes left inside. None of the remaining storm <br />windows are complete and will all need to be replaced, I did not find any screens. <br />STANDARDS AND GUIDELINES: <br />Chapin Park <br />
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