Restoration work could resume this fall on one of the oldest buildings in the D.C. region Magruder's Blacksmith Shop, a stone cottage in Potomac, Maryland, built four decades before George Washington laid the cornerstone at the U.S. Capitol.

WTOP/Dick Uliano

WTOP/Dick Uliano

WTOP/Dick Uliano

WTOP/Dick Uliano

Restoration work could resume this fall on one of the oldest buildings in the D.C. region Magruders Blacksmith Shop, a stone cottage in Potomac, Maryland, built four decades before George Washington laid the cornerstone at the U.S. Capitol.

The small stone house, the oldest building in Potomac, is a familiar landmark on River Road at Seven Locks Road just outside the Capital Beltway. But when its new owner installed a copper roof last summer and made other changes to the historic structure, the project was slapped with a Stop Work order, requested by the county Historic Preservation Office.

For nearly a year, the cottage, believed to have once been a blacksmith shop, has been bracketed on one side by scaffolding and surrounded by a chain-link fence.

I was shocked to see that copper was not an approved material. They explained to me the historical reason as to why that is, said Gus Stefanou, a Gaithersburg accountant who bought the historic building early last year. Its the oldest structure in Montgomery County, thought to have been built somewhere around the mid-1700s.

Stefanou also had installed vinyl windows against the historic character of the building.

Since the county ordered work to be stopped on the stone house last year, Stefanou has worked carefully with the Historic Preservation Office to ensure that the improvements he makes adhere to the structures history, according to Rebeccah Ballo, historic preservation supervisor with the Montgomery County Planning Department.

He has agreed to replace the new copper roof, installed last year, with a wood shake roof, replace a large dormer in the rear of the house with two smaller dormers and install wood frame windows to replace the white vinyl windows that were installed last summer.

The project now has been cleared by the historic preservation committee Im all about it being correct, Stefanou said.

Planning Department documents indicate that Stefanous second round of restoration plans were approved by the Historic Preservation Commission on June 29.

Stefanou is hoping that the work can resume on the historic house this fall.

Its a top priority for me. I do not like seeing the property in the current state its in, said Stefanou.

Link:
Restoration work could resume this fall on historic Maryland cottage - WTOP

Related Posts
August 27, 2020 at 9:52 am by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Window Replacement