A northeast Portland neighborhood. Not far from Irving Park.
If you click on the first photo to enlarge it, you may be able to make out the fact that there are two of these large window assemblies, one each on either side of the front door.
We were initially called out to look at the failed insulated glass in these windows, but of course as soon as we arrived and walked up the steps to the front door, we glanced over at these wood windows and could see that most of the sashes were in an advanced state of decay.
There was some checking going on in some of the sill components, but by and large, the rest of the assemblies looked pretty good. So it was determined to simply replace these Marvin sash with new custom-made wood windows.
It was determined that the flanking sash with the round top glass would be replaced with 9-lite SDL muntin pattern. Steve and Bruce are shown here as they begin to remove the Marvin sash.
As always, careful measures are taken to minimize the unnecessary spread of dust and debris.
We worked with Wooddale Windows in Oregon City (http://wooddalewindows.net) for the manufacture of these custom windows, and of course they were perfect.
They were exactly what we specified. Wooddale Windows having the ability to manufacture custom sash with SDL (simulated-divided-lites) fills a very important niche for us.
For the uninitiated, Simulated Divided Lites are, as the term suggests, a simulation of there being separate pieces of glass in the one window sash. The wood muntins that help provide the simulation are permanently affixed (adhered) to the glass on both the interior and the exterior.
This is a substantial improvement over the wood-grids that always fell off the windows, or the massive muntins that were used for a season to actually achieve True-Divided-Lites for insulated glass, instead of the common 7/8″ muntins that were used for over a hundred years with single-pane glass. Our client loved the windows.
Time for some of the casement sash to be replaced.
Scaffold is erected to facilitate our accessing the window openings as needed.
Several of the openings would otherwise be a bit of a challenge to reach from the exterior, such as this one in the attic.
Another opportunity to highlight our skill-set related to machining & installing new products into the original jambs. Jared & Nate have set up a temporary shop in one of the garages. The sash are sized, beveled, mortised for hinges, machined for weatherstripping and the casement latches installed.
Brandon goes about fine-tuning the fit and operation of these fir-sash with true-dived zinc-camed single-pane glass.
Quite the charming architectural delight out in the Northeastern portion of Hillsboro. What would you call that design? A Victorian Themed Midwestern Farm House?
With an Oval Glass Oak front door that accentuates the character to a “T.”
As has been common now for maybe over two decades, the art glass in this door is sandwiched between two other pieces of glass. Thus it is an insulated glass unit.
And as with all insulated glass units, you run the risk of seal failure, which means of course that humid-air finds its way between the panes and then condensates to the glass surfaces. This is what many folks call “foggy glass.” And that is the nature of the problem here. Foggy glass.
As a secondary problem, some of the radius trim around this glass unit has split and begun to pull away from the door. If you click to enlarge the photo you may be able to see in greater detail.
So the radius stop-trim is carefully removed from around the glass with great skill and finesse to prevent further damage.
The insulated glass unit is removed, and the glass opening in the door is temporarily boarded-up, after which the glass is taken back to our warehouse.
The insulated unit is disassembled, the glass carefully cleaned and the three oval shaped glass pieces are resealed together to create an insulated unit. Once the sealant has had time to cure, we return and reinstall the glass into the door.
Great care and expertise are employed to reattach the radius wood trim to the door where it had previously warped and pulled away. Kudos to Brandon Todd, our technician whose expertise oversaw this delicate operation to its completion.
There are those of course, who do not care for that much gingerbread, but for those who have a taste for such things, this is a very warm and charming door.
S.W. Portland, in the West Hills just South of Burnside.
If you enlarge the photo collage by clicking upon it, you should be able to see the cracked glass.
This Cherry Wood Door had Laminated Frosted (obscure) Glass in it. But it was not insulated double-pane glass. There is no air-space between the panes of glass.
So the annealed glass is easily broken, but it is somewhat held together by the film that is sandwiched between the two panes of glass, not unlike windshield glass in your car.
Per our client’s request, the plan was to upgrade the glass from frosted-laminated to frosted-tempered-insulated. So we acquired the new glass, removed the door from the jamb assembly…
…and set it upon our saw-horses, after-which the remaining laminated piece of glass succumbed to gravities pull and made removal somewhat easier for us. Due to the fact that insulated glass requires more space, because it consists of two panes (minimum) separated by a spacer-bar…
…to create an air-pocket as it were, the door must be modified. And thus it is that Steve Hilt is shown here going about routing-out the rabbet in the door to accommodate the need for this additional space, employing considerable skill and care not to damage this expensive, naturally finished hardwood door.
Technician Mike Stavish goes about chiseling-out the corners where the router cannot reach, and then re-applies the wood-stops after glazing in the new insulated glass unit.
The finished product. Literally better than new.
Not just because the glass now has an increased insulation factor, but also because the glass will be considerably more difficult to break.
This was a substantial remodel where the new door & sidelight assembly was installed by the remodeler. But the beveled glass was apparently delayed for some reason.
We were employed by the door supplier, “Crown Door” to handle the glazing of the glass into the new door & sidelight, because of our reputation as field glazers.
Ray handles the sidelight…
…while Jared wrestles with the door. I think there was some fine tuning of the wood muntins required. This is one of the reasons our services are often in demand. We’re not going to bolt if we run into unforeseen difficulties.
Many in the trades know that the door & window niche is often beset with unforeseen variables, which is why it is not a crowded niche. And it is of course, for this very reason that we find great satisfaction in problem-solving for our clients.
East Vancouver, across from the Portland airport, within sight of the mighty Columbia.
The arch-top wooden 2nd story doors seen in the previous photo with the Juliet Balcony have no protection from the elements.
And most all of us in this area know how the weather gets near the river not so very far the mouth of the gorge. The bottom-rail is toast on both doors. You can see better the telltale wavy-wood sticking that signifies the existence of water-damage (rot) if you click on the photo and enlarge it.
No, those are not true-divided lites. The muntins are simulated. Semi permanently adhered to the glass on both the interior and exterior sides. In the industry, we call this SDL. Simulated-Divided-Lites. So in reality, each door has only one insulated glass unit, even though the above photo showing the fogged-up glass makes it look like they are individual insulated units.
Back at our shop, the new bottom-rails are fabricated and installed. After weighing a number of options which we gave to our client, including the option of providing new doors, our client chose to have us replace the failed-glass, and the rotten bottom-rails, but to eliminate the SDL.
So the muntin grids were removed with the failed glass and the new tempered glass was manufactured while the glue had time to cure on the two repaired doors.
We replaced all the wood sticking that holds the glass to the doors.
After the new sticking was primed, it is carefully covered with masking tape, as is the glass and the door sash. The extensive masking serves two purposes.
It keeps the silicone sealant off the surfaces that will be painted, since silicone does not take paint, and it makes for a very professional caulking job. A proper caulking job includes applying just enough to achieve a certain degree of caulking oozing-out to ensure that all the seams and voids are filled between the sticking, the door sash and the glass surfaces beneath the sticking.
We use a special silicone caulking product that avoids the adverse reaction that can occur with the off-gassing of some caulking and the consequential degradation of the sealant (butyl) that seals the insulated glass unit. The point of course being that if the wrong sealant is used, it could cause further glass failure.