Glenlochan -The Beginning

Glenlochan -The Beginning
Glenlochan - The Beginning

Glenlochan Today

Glenlochan Today
Glenlochan Today

Sunday, May 20, 2012

What's a Sill Plate?

If you are not a contractor, then you may not know what a sill plate is.  I sure didn't until I had a need to know.  Unfortunately, I now have a need to know.  As we said in a previous post, the sill plates in Glenlochan were rotted and termite-damaged - sounds problematic, doesn't it?  But, just how serious of an issue is a rotted, damaged sill plate?  Well, Wikipedia defines a sill plate as follows:  A sill plate or sole plate in construction and architecture is the bottom, horizontal member of a wall or building to which vertical members are attached.  Sill plates are usually composed of lumber.

If case you are a visual learner, here's two pictures of one of the sill plates of the house (rotted, damaged and all).  The entire weight of the home is resting on the sill plates - both stories of the home, the attic, and the heavy old slate roof, and everything else in between.  Sill plates are apparently pretty important to the structural integrity of the house.




There are 4 sill plates running under the entire perimeter of the house - front, back and 2 sides, and out of the 4 sill plates under the home, 3 had to be replaced.  For a job that involves jacking up a house, pulling out long beams, re-mortering the bed, and replacing the rotted beams with brand, spanking-new, sill plates, reinforcements were required - yup, Joe came out to give his old man a hand with this job.


Considering all of the things that could go wrong when 2 men are jacking up a 2-story plus home by themselves, the sill plate replacement progressed remarkably smoothly.  Here's a few pictures documenting the progress:






We are happy to report that Glenlochan is resting comfortably on 3 new sill plates (and one original sill plate) and is ready for the next stage.



 

3 comments:

  1. do you have images of how you supported house and lifted to be able to cut loose the sill beam? thanks in advance

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  2. Unfortunately, we don't have images of that but he used a series of jacks throughout to support the house and lift it just enough to do the work. We had already gutted the plaster interior so we didn't have to worry about plaster cracks, etc.

    ReplyDelete
  3. If you want to jack up your house to fix it, use more jacks than you think you need, and then double that.

    You dont want to jack up your house when you jack it up, and have a completely broken home in a non metaphorical sense.

    ReplyDelete