Consider Restoring Old Windows Rather Than Replace
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Windows and doors are very important to the front facade of our many old St. Louis homes. Attend a meeting of the Preservation Board and you will likely hear a situation where a homeowner replaced original windows with completely different windows, often jarringly different. Â Back in July the New York Times had a great article (recommended) on windows, starting with an example of Barbara Jones who decided to restore her windows:
Old windows have acquired a bad reputation over the last few decades as drafty, inefficient and ecologically suspect: fixtures that should be replaced rather than refurbished.
But over the last decade or so, homeowners like Ms. Jones are becoming more common. Many people are keeping their old windows, fixing what they have in the name of appearance, history and, for some, cost savings, according to architects, preservationists and window restorers.
Your typical window replacement company would have tossed out the 125+ year old windows of my friends house shown above and put in bright white vinyl with a flat top and fake divisions. Â There was a time when large panes of glass meant wealth, the poor couldn’t afford large pieces of glass.
The process of window restoration isn’t for everyone but if you are handy in the shop doing so might save the appearance of your home as well as save you some money over a high quality replacement. Cheap windows won’t last 10 years much less more than 125 years.
Storm windows can be added on the exterior or interior to increase efficiency. Interior storm units are great for front facades where aesthetics are important.
Odds are you don’t have windows that are 8 feet tall, but no matter the height considering retaining at least the front windows is a good idea. Here are a few resources for further reading:
- How To Restore Sash Windows, Old-House Online
- How to Repair Sash Windows, This Old House
- Hard Decisions to Make When Old Windows Need Lots of Help, This Old House
- Repair, Don’t Replace Old Windows, Old House Authority
- The Truth about Windows -Â Historic Wood Windows & Storm Windows vs Replacement Windows, The Old House Guy
- What Replacement Windows Can’t Replace: The Real Cost of Removing Historic Windows, Illinois Historic Preservation Agency
- Preserving Historic Windows: Shattering the Myths of Replacement Windows, Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation
Thanks to Bill Hannegan for staying on me to do this post and thanks to Susan & Tom T. for allowing me to photograph your windows.
– Steve Patterson