Framing for the Screened Porch
Glen, a journeyman carpenter friend, and I took advantage of some warm and dry weather in January to do most of the framing for the porch
Framing for the hip-roofed screen porch |
Covered Walkway
We framed and sheathed a roof for the walkway that runs between the porch and the front door of the house. Since it even extends slightly over the nearest garage door, we will be able to navigate undercover from the kitchen/porch door to the front entry or garage door. The walk overhang is a continuation of, and blends in with,
the porch roof. It is carried by a double 2 x 12 beam running from the porch to the house without intervening post support. Since the overhang is wider than the walk, a post would have required unwanted penetrations through the insulation/watershed umbrella (the installation of which was covered in a prior post).
Clerestory Window Overhang
All that is needed to keep unwanted midsummer sunshine off of the second story clerestory windows an dedicated overhang extending about two feet outward from the house just above the top trim for the windows. Here pre-made trusses did make sense for saving time and money. Closed cornices at each end of the overhang handle the transitions between the facia of the steeply sloped overhang and the facia of the low-slope second story roof. The one at the west end could be built from a ladder standing on the first story roof but the one on the east was 25 ft above the ground and its complexity would require an impossible number of trips up and down a ladder.
Po Man's "Cherry Picker"
Second stage scaffold |
The scaffold, that was anchored to the floor and ceiling inside the house and cantilevered through the wall, was done in two stages. The first was adjacent to the south-facing wall for the purpose of framing, sheathing and roofing
Anchoring design for the cantilevered scaffold |
Soffet / Cornice Construction
The framing for the underside of any roof overhang comprises either rafter tails on the eave side or their equivalent called lookouts, on the rake side. The tails and lookouts can be left exposed for a rustic look or can be veneered on the
Wedges added to the rafter tails (green); notice the use of the Rainhandler instead of a conventional gutter |
However, the eave side is often modified to give a more finished look by making the soffet horizontal with special framing or by using
proprietary soffet materials like vinyl or metal to effect horizontal-ness without the benefit of framing. But doing so creates an awkward transition of the facia and the soffet at the corner between the eave and rake that has to be reconciled by what is called a cornice return.
Our design called for a horizontal soffets and cornice returns for all overhangs. Since the pitch for all of our roofs is low, it was easier to add 2-by wedges, to the bottom of the rafter tails than to frame horizontally or use proprietary materials. The cornice returns were relatively simple except for the abrupt change from the second story overhang and the low-pitch second story roof.
Using a jig on the table saw for cutting the wedges |
Steel Soffets
Modern soffets are usually not framed in. Instead they are created with short pieces of vented vinyl or aluminum, and occasionally steel, running perpendicular to the wall of the house. I opted for steel soffet material that can be purchased in convenient 12' lengths that run parallel to the wall. The way I used them was to frame (as in picture frame, not structural frame) the periphery of the soffet with salvaged 1x lumber that I rabbeted underneath to accept and hide the edges of the vented steel panels. Once the panels were tucked under the frame, I screwed them to the bottom of the wedge-added rafters and the rafter tails.
Metal Roofing and Siding At Last!
The roof sheathing has been protected by either 6 mil plastic sheeting or 30 lb felt paper, or both, for many months while awaiting the day the steel roofing could be installed (prior post on temporary protection). Finally, the completion of the porch and the overhangs made it possible to measure and order both the roofing and the steel siding. (For a discussion of and the rationale for standing seam steel roofing, go to the post on roof design and for steel siding, go to the post on wall cladding.)
All that was needed for estimates on roofing and siding was to produce homemade scaled drawings that provided the information the manufacturer needed for both the steel panels and associated steel trim pieces. The manufacturer countered with two things: (a) a list of components for careful vetting and (b) digital drawings that could be taken back to the building for dimension verification before finalizing the order. In order to reduce the cooling load, we ordered roofing and siding with color shades that had a high solar reflectance -- light gray for the roof and white for the siding.
The next task is to get the garage undercover in order to have dry storage for the steel cladding.