We are almost done with the foundation restoration and repairs of the timber frame structure, allowing the Cold Mountain Builders' crew to start the rebuilding process.
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Weeks of July 16 and 23, 2012 Foundation repairs and rebuilding the undercarriage continued despite some new structural problems. The sills are all in, and Rod and his men are doing a beautiful job on raising the top foundation stones to meet the new, now level, sills. You would never know the wall had drooped about a foot along the northeast corner. Half the old roofing has been removed, and “ice and water shield” has been installed. Joseph and I met with Ed from Arron’s team for a briefing on unanticipated problems: rot on one of the posts on the water side will necessitate replacement, and water damage from open windows on that side led to squirrels creating nests in the beam! Both ends of the beam can be saved, preserving the original English tying joints, and the middle will have a new piece of hemlock spliced in. Our original hydropower estimate of net power generation seems to be within range of the original, as are the cost estimates. Edwin’s plan looks as if it will require only a small amount of digging out of the foundation floor and uses an exit tailrace outside of the building. The permits for silt removal and dam repairs will have to be obtained from DEP. In the meantime we will work on tree removal across the stream for access to that end of the dam. We plan to walk that next week to lay out the entry road, future septic field and parking lot, as well as mark all trees for removal. Progress continues! Meetings with Jay, Rob, Chris and then Carmen. We’re going with window sashes built by Matthews Brothers, which are the closest match to originals, with frames built by CMB’s shop. We reviewed plans for hydropower and discussed the floor “sandwich”. We settled on using new hemlock on the first floor, as the old was in bad shape and not that old – all to be cleared by the SHPO, etc. in a couple of weeks. Solid boards will be used on the floors and sheathing - no plywood. One of the old millstones was found at a neighbor’s yard. It’s a precise fit (51 inches in diameter and about 7-1/2 inches thick) to the cutout in the floor joists that we had discovered, so we’ll acquire it. In a subsequent meeting with Arron, a review of progress showed that the whole first floor support system may be finished by the end of the week. Beams that had had tenons cut into their ends earlier were being installed, and the foundations capstones were being set up under the new sills all around the mill. As the wood structure overhangs the foundation because of adding insulation and so forth on the exterior walls, the foundation capstones will be set out about an inch to take up some of the overhang. The post to the east of the door on the south side is badly rotted and will have to be entirely replaced. The troops spent lots of time examining the dam and the wheelhouse to develop a plan for the hydro system. Meetings with Jay, Rob, Chris and then Carmen. We’re going with window sashes built by Matthews Brothers, which are the closest match to originals, with frames built by CMB’s shop. We reviewed plans for hydropower and discussed the floor “sandwich”. We settled on using new hemlock on the first floor, as the old was in bad shape and not that old – all to be cleared by the SHPO, etc. in a couple of weeks. Solid boards will be used on the floors and sheathing - no plywood.
One of the old millstones was found at a neighbor’s yard. It’s a precise fit (51 inches in diameter and about 7-1/2 inches thick) to the cutout in the floor joists that we had discovered, so we’ll acquire it. In a subsequent meeting with Arron, a review of progress showed that the whole first floor support system may be finished by the end of the week. Beams that had had tenons cut into their ends earlier were being installed, and the foundations capstones were being set up under the new sills all around the mill. As the wood structure overhangs the foundation because of adding insulation and so forth on the exterior walls, the foundation capstones will be set out about an inch to take up some of the overhang. The post to the east of the door on the south side is badly rotted and will have to be entirely replaced. The troops spent lots of time examining the dam and the wheelhouse to develop a plan for the hydro system. After two weeks away, we visited the mill today. Significant progress, though there is much detail work, so it is not as obvious as in the past. The building has been completely leveled, the sag taken out of the north side, etc., and all the sills have been replaced, with joinery fastening the vertical posts into the sills all complete. The sills are all notched and ready for the bolsters and floor joists (this process has begun, and one old bolster and one new have been joined to the new sills). Arron reports that the building is now about 1 inch out of square, and we may get that eventually also. He continues to take the “smile” out of the tie beams. As for the north foundation wall, the door into the basement is framed on its sides and bottom, and the wall is now a couple of feet above the level where the basement floor will be laid under the north addition. The door is nicely positioned to provide easy access down to the top of the old wheelhouse, much of which will remain.
Aaron, after the scaffolding was put up right close to the first floor supports, saw that he would want to propose changing the plan for reconstructing the first floor supports that will be much more in keeping with the original layout. We will have removed three layers of flooring on the first floor, carefully removing what we can save and re-using the good stuff for the underlayment of the floor so it will look as it does today from within the foundation. By the end of May the deck was built to provide access for building the northern wall. Rod and his two sons have rigged up a pulley from steel I-beams stretched across scaffolding outside the building. They move stone onto the deck with the skidder, then drill a hole in the stone, insert a threaded sleeve, then screw in an eye-bolt. Then they just hoist the stone or granite block and lower it into the hold. Down there, Rod’s nephew sets the stone in place on wet cement laid on top of the footing. A zip line runs from a locust on the Luhn property through the open west wall, through a northern window and then attaches to a maple down our property toward Pleasant Street. The zip line lifts the huge hemlock beams and slides them over to the Mill to be set in place. Another cool thing we saw was an “Archimedes” rig for determining the level of the floor. Not yet using lasers, so they used a water tube on the second floor to figure out how much each part of the floor needs to be adjusted to have everything level so as to counter sagging of as much as 10 inches. The western wall has steel plates on all the posts, with jacks rigged to the plates. This is how they lift the whole west wall to slide in new sills. The next design focus has to be on getting the details set precisely for the turbine installation. The discovery here is that most of the floor is large stone and rubble, rather than ledge, so placing the penstock has become easier and may not require chipping away at ledge. This team will have to try to save as much of the old wheelhouse as possible; we will probably be able to save about half of the hole where the old penstock entered as well as the remains of the old turbine to the west of the penstock entry point.
You can see why it’s exciting to be here every step of the way! Tony has said all along that every time he goes into the Mill, he discovers something new. These are some examples he has reported: The most exciting thing we (the team) discussed was the discovery of a circle cut out of the timbers in the undercarriage to house a bedstone. This had been buried under the floor, which was three or four boards thick in some places. They obviously just added flooring whenever needed, rather than ripping anything up… Weight was added, holes were drilled, foundation stones were removed, joists were drilled, etc. It is a real testament to the original design that the building didn’t collapse long ago. We now want to figure out how to show this area, not burying it again beneath the floor… Glass? I will check with TriPyramid, which helps build the flagship Apple stores. Back in early April we found a great spot where the belts came up through the floor between first and second floors in the first ell. Before that, surprises came up at every visit… the scribe-rule joinery, the English tying joints over gunstock beams, the old tubs for lacquering the turned handles, etc. The crew has found, as they have cleared the detritus, some interesting equipment such as cutting tools, grinding wheels, and many turned wooden pieces of various shapes and sizes. They also discovered a nameplate on piece of hardware we had been unable to identify. I later discovered that it was a dowel maker from W. S. Hawker Mfg. Co. of Dayton, Ohio.
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This blog follows the process of rehabilitating the mill and restoring hydropower to the dam at Freedom Falls in Freedom Maine.
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