Roslyn Harbor, NY
Cedarmere Mill
Scope/Solutions
Cedarmere was named by William Cullen Bryant, who purchased the forty-acre property in 1843. Bryant constructed the mill in 1862 in the Gothic Revival style. Page Ayres Cowley Architecture was leading a major restoration to the mill and observed sagging roof rafters around an infilled skylight and a deteriorated valley rafter. SGH evaluated the existing roof framing conditions and helped develop structural strengthening.
Highlights of our work include the following:
- Reviewing available documents to understand the planned work and the existing conditions
- Visiting the site to document the roof framing
- Analyzing the roof structure, including the effects of the chimney leaning on the roof framing
- Developing details to strengthen the sagging rafters around the skylight, supplement the deteriorated valley rafter, and reinforce the existing roof truss connections
- Designing repairs for existing masonry walls
- Collaborating with the architecture team to develop details that would provide the necessary structural capacity, while retaining as much of the historic fabric as possible
Project Summary
Solutions
Repair & Rehabilitation | Preservation
Services
Structures | Building Enclosures
Markets
Culture & Entertainment
Client(s)
Page Ayres Cowley Architecture
Specialized Capabilities
Repair & Strengthening | Preservation
Key team members
Additional Projects
Northeast
Edgell Memorial Library
The Edgell Memorial Library is located in the Framingham Center Historic District, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. As part of a full exterior envelope rehabilitation, SGH was retained in 2007 to investigate leakage of the historic slate roofs.
Northeast
Eliot Memorial Bridge
The Eliot Memorial Bridge is a stone arch pedestrian bridge in the Blue Hills Reservation. In certain areas, outer face stones had fallen to the ground and left voids in the structure. SGH evaluated the historic mortar’s composition and made recommendations for an appropriate repair mortar.



