Remembering Andy Engel
Join us in celebrating the life of carpenter, editor, and writer Andy Engel with this collection of articles written and inspired by him.
In Memoriam: Andy Engel, 1961-2022
Contributing editor Andy Engel died suddenly on March 23 while mountain biking with friends near his home in Connecticut. The cause of death was a heart attack. Andy was 60 years old.
Andy first joined the staff of Fine Homebuilding in late 1996, walking straight off a job site and into our offices, trailing mud and sawdust. In his first few weeks, he looked so lost and out of place that the smart money had him gone by spring. The smart money was wrong … by every measure.
Andy worked at Fine Homebuilding off and on for the rest of his life. He left multiple times, working variously as a carpenter, a contractor, the editor of Professional Deck Builder, and even briefly as the construction events manager for JLC Live. He also wrote two books, Building Stairs and Carpentry Complete, both published by The Taunton Press. He demonstrated carpentry techniques at trade shows and wrote articles for This Old House, The Journal of Light Construction, and Tools of the Trade.
But Andy always returned to Fine Homebuilding. It was the heart of, and his entrée into, a community of people who love building and who see it as an honorable pursuit. Andy cherished that community and devoted his entire professional life to its nurture. And despite being an old-fashioned sort, he was an early advocate of online forums because they allowed him to connect with even more people. As a result, Andy had a lot of friends whom he had never met.
Andy’s professional accomplishments, however, are not the measure of the man. Despite living in a world that seems crazier every day, Andy lived a sensible life and did so with great joy. He rose early, worked hard, loved his family, and tended his friendships like a garden he depended on. Quick to laugh, he was also quick to lend a hand or loan a tool. Although he died way too soon, those of us who knew him are happy that he died exactly the way he would have wanted, out with his friends, doing something he loved.
—Kevin Ireton
Share your memories
You can read more about what people had to say about Andy and share your own comments in this GBA forum conversation and this FHB forum post (or comment below). Folks are also sharing remembrances on social media, including these Instagram posts by Ben Bogie and Ian Schwandt.
Read Andy’s work
Although Andy has written countless articles for Fine Homebuilding, below are a few timeless favorites. Browse all of Andy’s articles on his author profile page.
- Podcast 252: PRO TALK With Andy Engel
- Andy Engel is Keeping Craft Alive
- Tips for Laying Out and Installing Vinyl Siding
- Laying Out Stud Walls
- Joining Rails and Fittings
- How to Pour and Finish a Small Concrete Slab
- Installing Upper Kitchen Cabinets
Read the full obituary
Andy Engel, a college dropout and the son of a New Jersey mechanic, who became a respected editor of building trade magazines, and who built his own home in a Connecticut town famous for such residents as Arthur Miller, William Styron, and Dustin Hoffman, died suddenly on March 23, 2022. He was mountain biking with friends in the Upper Paugussett State Forest in Newtown, Conn. The cause of death was a heart attack. He was 60 years old.
Born Sept. 11, 1961, in Easton, Penn., to Sheila MacArthur Engel and Charles “Ink” Engel, Andy grew up in Belvidere, N.J., where his mother taught him to love books and his father taught him to love working with his hands. In the seventh grade, he met Patricia Steed, the woman he would one day marry, and who thought him at the time “a very strange boy.” They married years later, once they were certain that doing so would not diminish a friendship both had come to rely on.
Andy attended Rutgers University for a year, then dropped out and took up carpentry. He loved the work and was good at it, eventually becoming a stair builder, the pinnacle of the trade, before starting his own company building spec homes.
In 1996, he knocked the mud off his boots and interviewed for a job as an editor with Fine Homebuilding magazine in Newtown, Conn. Hired on the strength of his construction knowledge and his love of language, he worked at the magazine on and off for the rest of his life. He also served as the editor of Professional Deck Builder for five years, managed events for a time at JLC Live, performed carpentry demonstrations at trade shows, and wrote articles for This Old House, The Journal of Light Construction, and Fine Homebuilding. In addition, he wrote two books, Building Stairs and Carpentry Complete, both published by the Taunton Press.
But Andy never stopped building. First, while working full time at Fine Homebuilding, he built a home in Roxbury, Conn., for his family, and then, during his many breaks from magazine work, he built and renovated homes for others. Andy lived and breathed carpentry. His entire professional life was devoted to learning the craft, teaching it to others, and celebrating those who practice it well and with passion, who get up in the dark to unroll the cords and hoses and who come home exhausted with sawdust in their hair, having done work they view as their legacy.
The words “neighbor” and “citizen” were important to Andy, and they carried responsibilities that he took seriously. Over the years, Andy was a Boy Scout leader, a member of the Region 12 school board, chairman of the Roxbury Recreation Committee, chairman of the Roxbury Board of Finance, and vice chairman of the Roxbury Inland Wetlands Commission. He also spent time maintaining the bike trails he used.
Garrulous and exuberant, Andy had a lot of passions. He loved his wife and sons above all else, but his three Australian shepherds were not far behind. Andy loved bad puns, good bourbon, and cycling, especially mountain biking. He loved arcane facts, the writing of John McPhee, and the music of John Prine. He loved ideas, irony, and craft beer, not necessarily in that order. He loved good food, conversation, laughter, and friends, of which he had hundreds.
He is survived by his wife, Patricia Steed, his sons, Duncan Engel and Kevin Engel, his sister-in-law, Sharon Keen, and her husband, Victor Keen, along with nieces and nephews Corey Miller, Stephanie Miller, Mark Miller, and their families.
Andy was somehow more alive than most people. Those who knew him will feel his loss for a long time, lamenting that he died too soon, but all would agree that he died exactly the way he would have chosen; out with his friends, doing what he loved.
The family hopes you might consider donating to the Housatonic Valley Chapter of the New England Mountain Bike Association, which works to preserve open space and to maintain the trails that Andy enjoyed: HVNEMBA, Memorial Donation, P.O. Box 2221, Acton, MA 01720.
View Comments
Andy was a kind and funny and friendly man, always willing to help explain building to us non-carpenter types at the Taunton offices. He had a ready smile and it was a gift to know him. When I started at Fine Woodworking, he was actually an editor there for a time, but he returned to Homebuilding quickly. Sometimes there are people you meet who enrich your life by just being there. Andy was one of those. My sincere condolences to all who loved him.
Andy came to my house when we first bought it and talked me through a lot of things. You can imagine a house built in 1791 can be a bit of a project, even for an experienced DIYer. He laid out what order to do everything and he and Patrick McCombe answered questions all along the way.
He was a super good guy and the only person who would ever say "Hey, let me know when you're going to dig that floor up and lay down concrete. I love that stuff and would love to help."
Kind heart, warm smile, great laugh. I'll miss his presence in the world.
Nicely done....it's good we take a moment to remember those who have passed and share their lives with others who didn't know them.....
I see "Carpentry Complete" is out of print from Taunton, and only available on Amazon from third party resellers. Why doesn’t Taunton re-issue it in honor of Andy Engel?
R. Welch
He seems like a beautiful person. I would have loved to know him. He appears to have lived a wonderful life, I am sure it continues to be wonderful from his new vantage point.
In the winter of 2021, my best friend (not a tradesman) needed a weekend away from stress and work in Boston so he booked an AirBnB for a long weekend in the rolling Connecticut hills. My shop was just a few towns south so he came down to say hi first, check out what I was working on for a client, and then he headed up to check in for his stay.
He sent me a text after checking in, something along the lines of "I'm staying with the loveliest people, Andy and Pat. They have 3 dogs just like Brody [my Australian Shepherd], and I think Andy does something related to building or carpentry. You should come by tomorrow and say hi."
The puzzle pieces clicked in my mind. I was aware of (something of an understatement, it was pure admiration and respect more than simply 'awareness') Andy's work through FHB, and through social media I knew he had 3 Aussies he posted about every now and then. I assumed given his work for Taunton he also must live in the area. I texted my friend back, in all capital letters, "Is Andy Engel your AirBnB host??!!" to which he replied, "Yes! Have you heard of him?" Again, something of an understatement.
I drove up the next day to meet Andy and his wife Pat, with Brody in tow. Brody and Andy and Pat's dogs ran around for an hour or so while I, very briefly, got to know Andy outside of computer screens and magazine pages. As others who knew him far better and spent far more time with him have written beautifully here, on GBA, and elsewhere over the last weeks, he was uncommonly kind, decent, and full of life. We toured the lovely guest cottage Andy had built above their garage and his shop, where my friend was staying. Beautifully appointed with mission style furnishings and design touches; the kind of work only someone who loves the process as much as the results can produce. The real thrill of the visit was seeing the door Andy built in person using the method featured here and on FWW of triple laminating a door to have all the beauty and strength of full through tenon door construction for a fraction of the work.
My friend and I left to go on a hike (a great, local trail per Andy's recommendation) and then I left after Andy and I exchanged business cards. We kept up on social media 'liking' one another's posts either about wood or our dogs, and planned to let the dogs play again once the weather was warm and the grass was dry.
Like everyone else, I will miss Andy's presence in the many communities that he gave so much to. I will think of him often when I build a set of laminated doors for my new shop this summer, and beyond.