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Here’s a fun guest post from a Clinton Hill brownstone owner…
The story: Our 130-year old iron fence was in terrible shape, barely standing at all—the last of the five identical houses in our row to have even pieces of the original. I had Vinnie from Italian Art Iron Works on Bergen Street out to look at it, and was still skeptical that it could be saved. It was missing 17 arrows and five of the seven post-end caps. Fortunately, previous owners saved 16 arrows, so at least we had those. Vinnie says to me, “You gotta spend-a the money.” So I did. Here’s a photo of Vinnie’s guy putting the pieces together along with one of what it looks like now. But that spikey finial you see below was one of only two that we had. I scoured the salvage places, emailed photos to Olde Good Things and all the rest—nada. Vinnie ballparked that it could cost us $4,000 to have new ones cast—yikes!

And then…

…my architect found these guys: Tomahawk Foundry in Rice Lake, Wisconsin, of all places. I sent them a picture and described what I needed. They said they’d do it for $150 apiece. I sent them one of the remaining finials. Three weeks later, they sent me the parts—gray iron, cast in sand. Original on the left, replica on the right. Perfect.

So if you’re looking to bring your iron fence back to life and can’t find all the pieces, there ya go. Fence should be complete again within a couple of weeks. And Bob’s yer uncle.

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  1. Julius blum is a good source. Also look at King Architectural Metals or Lawler Foundry. Lawler makes a match to the casting to my original fence. About three years ago I bought 70 or so of them at about $16 each from their distributor in NJ and fabricated a fence on my own with a little help from Mitchell Iron Works (highly reccommend) for the gate and seven support posts. A neighbor helped me install it -thanks again Andy- (I’m at the corner of Carroll & Hoyt in case anyone wants to do a drive-by). Unfortunately that distributer is caput. King is a better and more consumer friendly source anyway (they ship directly). Next project is the newels and stoop rail.

  2. Great post, can we request more reno/creative improvement type info like this? The pricing commentary by the bklyn real estate “experts” on this site looking to drive prices down is getting old…starting to seem desperate.

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