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Home Building - Exterior Siding
by: Tammy Crosby
Nothing will impact the appearance of your home more dramatically than
the type of siding you choose, so it’s no surprise that homeowners are
looking to dress to impress. As you look for exterior siding, look for a
material that suits the style of your house, fits your lifestyle and
works geographically, because you will be living with your choice of
siding for a long, long time. When it comes to figuring out the cost of
having your home sided - size really does matter, since it’s labor more
than materials that you’re paying for.
Here is a look at some of the most popular and affordable materials for
exterior siding:
Solid Wood
The first choice for most homeowners is wood, because it stands
unmatched for beauty and durability. Wood is available in boards,
shingles or shakes. These products are typically made from red or white
cedar but they are also available in pine, spruce, redwood, cypress and
Douglas fir. The benefits to going with wood is it offers some
insulation value, is easy to repair and install, and is available
pre-stained, primed or unfinished in many styles. Some products even
come with fire-retarding treatments. The drawback to solid wood siding
is that it must be painted or stained, which will add several thousand
dollars to the cost of the job and to maintenance expenses in the
future. For example, wood shingles cost between $3 and $4 per square
foot before staining or painting.
Cedar Shingles
Homes sided in cedar shingles (also called "shakes") are made of natural
cedar and are usually stained in shades of brown, gray, or other earthen
colors. Shakes are very popular on traditional, ranch, historical and
vacation homes that want to blend in with its natural or rustic
surroundings.
Engineered or Composite Wood
If solid wood is too much of a strain on your pocketbook you might want
to consider engineered or composite wood products like plywood, oriented
strand board (OSB) and hardboard ($1.50 to $2.70 per square foot), but
even the best of these products won’t give you the look of real wood. Of
the group, plywood (often sold in a reverse board-and-batten design) is
the least expensive, easiest to install and has the longest track
record. It works best on contemporary-styled homes. OSB and hardboard
products are sold as 4 x 8 sheets or are molded to look like clapboard.
They are available preprimed or prefinished in a wide variety of colors,
which keeps the cost down.
Fiber Cement
If you want the appearance of wood, stucco or masonry, but can’t afford
it, fiber cement siding offers a strong and attractive alternative. This
durable, natural-looking material is best known by the brand names
HardiPlank® and HardiPanel®. A real selling point is the fact that it’s
fireproof, resistant to rot, fungus and termites (a great perk if you
live in an area that is hot and humid), and may have a warranty of up to
50 years.
The installed costs of fiber-cement are reported to be less than
traditional masonry or synthetic stucco, equal to or less than hardboard
siding, and more than vinyl siding. As always, size matters when it
comes to your exterior.
Stucco
You can’t get any more sturdy than stucco. Simply put, you’re covering
your home with a layer or rock. Cement stucco is made up of a small
quantity of lime, Portland cement, and water. This fine grained concrete
is attached to your house using waterproof barrier paper, galvanized
wire mesh, and metal flashings (handy devices that channel water to the
exterior wall). While the strength of stucco remains unchallenged among
sidings (it has a track record of say over a thousand years), it does
have it drawbacks because of its rigid makeup. If the wood framing
beneath it shrinks or if the house foundation moves, the cement stucco
could crack. To avoid this happening to your new home, be sure the
contractor frames your house with wood sheathing and allows the lumber
to dry for about 60 days before installing the stucco. If you hire a
talented plasterer, you have unlimited surface texture possibilities. If
you want to add color to your stucco be sure to spend the extra money on
a m!
asonry penetrating stain, because other paints may peel after time.
Traditional stucco has a low material cost, but is expensive to install
($12 to $16 per square foot).
Aluminum and Metal Siding
Aluminum and steel siding, may be considered a step up from vinyl in
durability, but it’s plagued with its own limitations. Like vinyl, metal
siding comes in limited colors, is a worse insulator than vinyl, dents
easily and is very difficult to repair. So if you live in an area where
you get a lot of hail or your house is surrounded by acorn trees, you
might want to reconsider using metal.
Vinyl
Thanks to new technology in the vinyl industry, the common stereotype of
a “plastic” home has all but faded. New product offerings wood-like
textures, shingles and shakes, deeper colors and more trim options are
making vinyl a popular alternative to its high priced rivals. Vinyl is
made from polyvinyl chloride (PVC), which makes it immune to rotting and
flaking, but even the best vinyl siding will crack, split and look dingy
after awhile. The fact that it requires low maintenance - it can be
washed with a garden hose - and that it is cheap - $1.50 to $2 per
square foot, makes it very appealing. Not so appealing is the fact that
it has limited color choices, provides virtually no insulation, is not
easy to repair, can fade over time and doesn’t stand up well against
Mother Nature.
EIFS (Exterior Insulation and Finish Stucco)
Synthetic stucco, also called EIFS (exterior insulated finish system)
consist of a a polymer-and-cement mixture, which is applied in two coats
over rigid foam insulation and a fiberglass mesh. You might want to
double think using this product, because since it came on the scene two
decades or so ago it has been unable to successfully keep the water out.
Water gets behind many EIFS systems and can’t get out. What that means
for you, is that your home will likely suffer some serious structural
wood rot. Synthetic manufacturers are working on rectifying this problem
by using special water management systems which collect the water and
divert it back to the exterior of the home before it suffers water
damage. Being a new homeowner, this may be one worry you’ll want skip.
Synthetic stucco materials cost more than the real thing, but because
it’s easier to apply it costs less.
The biggest trends in exteriors are vibrant colors and a wood look
Interior design has always been the big “in” when building a home, but
now homeowners are starting to look outside. Let’s face it - first
impressions go a long way, so your exterior home should really stand
out. People are looking for something different and unique, but at the
same time want low maintenance - in walks vinyl. Vinyl manufacturers are
hard at work to meet the demands of homeowners who want a higher quality
and more stylish vinyl siding. The big change to vinyl is that it’s
coming out bright and colorful, now that it’s adding acrylics into its
mix. Most color palettes for vinyl used to be very similar and pale, but
now homeowners can find deep rich colors like forest green and barn red.
Another new look by vinyl is dressing up as cedar shingles. These cedar
shingles come very close to looking like the real cedar. The real beauty
to these shingles is that they won’t split, rot, flake, peel or chip
like the real thing. Over the last several years, almost every vinyl
manufacturer has come out with some sort of replica cedar product.
With everyone trying to simulate wood products, it would only make sense
that someone would market a real wood siding product. That’s what
Georgia-Pacific, who makes vinyl and fiber cement, has done with its
Catawba hardboard siding. Catawba is 100 percent hard wood made out of
pulp-grade wood chips pressed and bonded at very high temperatures. This
process makes the wood very weather resistant. If you use two coats of
paint you won’t have to paint it again for 10 years - double the time of
traditional wood products.
About The Author
Tammy Crosby-Editor, Dream Designs
http://www.thehousedesigners.com are independent architects
and designers who joined together to provide you the best house plans at
the best price.
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