Historic Bozeman Hotel Renovation

shrapnel

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Aug 27, 2015
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3,152
Living in Bozeman my entire life, I have seen lots of changes over the years. Too many old buildings were demolished for progress and they put up some real junk where the frontier buildings used to be.

Someone bought the Bozeman Hotel and is having it renovated. I was in there this morning talking to the construction workers and they told me what was going on.

It was all good news, the new owner values the structure and wants it to be restored in the best and most historic way. It was built in 1890 and undergone many modifications over the years with little concern for the integrity of the original structure.

It will be finished sometime in 2028 and in the mean time they have a dedicated crew, working hard on the restoration.

This is some of what I saw that was done by other contractors over time, and some not too concerned with how good of a job they did…






IMG_3173.jpegIMG_3174.jpegIMG_3175.jpegIMG_3176.jpeg
 
The tough part in renovating the old ones is dealing with asbestos, lead paint, and seismic upgrades before you even get to aesthetics. Then it’s a complete rebuild of mechanical and electrical so it’s tough to make a pro forma work if they are too far gone! It’s sure an honor to be part of a team to save one.
 
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The tough part in renovating the old ones is dealing with asbestos, lead paint, and seismic upgrades before you even get to aesthetics. Then it’s a complete rebuild of mechanical and electrical so it’s tough to make a pro forma work if they are too far gone! It’s sure an honor to be part of a team to save one.
Pretty shitty brick repair IMO.
 
There is definitely a reason for building inspectors. It is stunning the things people do.
Some of those in-fill areas are probably still structural( so to speak, its brick right?) Bozeman inspectors micro- manage, but often dont have a clue. Clearly the supervisor said good enough.
 
There is definitely a reason for building inspectors. It is stunning the things people do.
We had a guy build a workshop in the attic of two story 8 unit condo building . Cut trusses down and everything . He got caught when he tried to sell it , it failed inspection , LOL .
Turned out he did it for two other friends in different buildings . Guess who got to inspect all the buildings attics ?LOL
 
Some of those in-fill areas are probably still structural( so to speak, its brick right?) Bozeman inspectors micro- manage, but often dont have a clue. Clearly the supervisor said good enough.
It would seem the header for the original windows or openings would still be there and functional ? They were mostly just plugging the hole ?
Still ugly .
 
That brick work makes me nauseous.
We restored an 1895 Queen Anne as our first home. Ended up getting it registered with the national historical society. The masons we found were artists. They traveled all over the country doing big historical jobs like lighthouses and would work on our place when they were home for a few off days. Miss that house.
 

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