I volunteered to help fix a couple things at my wife's church. I'm out of my league on one task: how do I make sure this permanently closed exterior door NEVER leaks?
It's ~10' up, often bears the brunt of heavy rain. The facade is sandstone over standard brick/mortar. The wooden door framing appears to be intact, for now.
My idea was to create a hardie board plug sized to the stone opening (not the door), push the board in flush with the door frame, apply [insert the most durable sealant you kind strangers recommend here] to the edges of the door frame, screw the board to the frame, and seal the edges with [more durable sealant].
Or something else entirely?
I'll take a stab... your idea would probably work. I would one-up it. I would build a 2x4 frame attached to the inside of the existing door frame so that i would have something beefier to screw the hardi to. Doing that would also allow me to have a brace in the middle to fight potential fleing/bowing of the hardi panel. Then I would caulk the edges like there was no tomorrow.
why not make it a big glass block window?
Use NP-1 sealant. It'll outlast the building.
SV reX
MegaDork
12/19/23 12:49 p.m.
Is it wrong to suggest actual masonry like it should have been done?
NOHOME
MegaDork
12/19/23 1:13 p.m.
SV reX said:
Is it wrong to suggest actual masonry like it should have been done?
I was wondering why the correct answer had not been mentioned yet. Last I checked the Masons had not checked out of business.
I also like the idea of a window. What is on the other side of the door?
Also consider a bit of flashing at the bottom to divert water from the sill.
Thanks for the responses.
The framed-plug route sounds simplest.
There isn't budget to hire a mason. (Also, the sandstone facade is a PITA to deal with [requires periodic sealant] and may be difficult to obtain matching stone?? I have no idea, but it's 100+ years old.)
BTW, this is literally an old backdoor to the church, not a priority to make perfect.
Glass blocks would be cool, but... on the other side of the door is a hallway with an ADA ramp that is several feet above the bottom of the door.
The inside of the door has a piece of 1/2" plywood screwed to it, then drywall. Whoever closed it in didn't match the rest of the wall in the hallway - it bumps out ~1 foot to the door. In other words, you can't tell there's a door there, from inside.
Plug it. Seal it. Put a faux-doorknob on it and maintain the look of a door that is inexplicably ten feet in the air.
It's a church... use your imagination for an appropriate (or inappropriate) sign to put on that door.
SV reX
MegaDork
12/19/23 5:34 p.m.
Why is matching the stone important? ANY masonry would look better that a crappy piece of plywood and some caulk.
A forum where there's nothing we won't DIY (except circumcision), and folks are skeered of a little masonry? It's a trade that's 10,000 years old!