
This Old House
Norm and the crew prep for the foundation pour and discuss types of radiant heat.

Norm and the crew prep for the foundation pour and discuss types of radiant heat.

Architect Mary Otis Stevens uses an architectural model to describe proposed renovations.

The crew assesses the condition of Weatherbee Farm and discusses restoration plans.

This crew tackles the restoration of a 200-year-old rambling farmhouse.

Replacing a broken window pane in an exterior door; different types of safety glass; pruning a tree.

Re-seeding a damaged lawn; installing a kitchen sink.

Norm arrives from Boston, and Steve learns how to make a traditional kiva fireplace.

Steve takes viewers to Santa Fe, NM, to look at the show's newest project.

The Concord project draws to a close as Steve Thomas tours the finished barn.

The barn nears completion, and Richard Trethewey visits a German plumbing fixture factory.

Tiling continues, lighting fixtures are installed, and Norm and Steve build library doors.

Steve tours an eco-friendly gravel yard; Norm and Tommy frame windows.

Painters apply the last coat of paint to the exterior; Bob goes to a Canadian mill.

A lock installer figures out the best locking system to install; Bob goes to Seattle.

The strip oak flooring is ripped up, and author John Berendt takes us on a tour.

A new water main is going in; windows and "Savannah Grey" bricks have arrived.

With the demolition of the rear porches complete, the crew moves on to framing.

This Old House travels to Savannah, Georgia, for an 1884 Italianate Victorian townhouse.

We arrive after a snowstorm to tour the final finishings, including period-reproduction furnishings.

Tom Silva installs a new mortice lock, and Norm installs a full-light patio door.