All summer - since April, in fact, I've been working on an arbor for the entrance to the patio. When we moved here, I planted a Climbing Joseph's Coat rose and didn't realize how much it really likes to climb.
(Now that I think about it, I believe there may have been a rickety lattice trellis and gate thing there before. If so, it was low enough that even I felt close to the roof, and at 5'3" that doesn't happen often!)
Anyway, as weather permitted, I've painted the pieces (primed and 2 coats of paint), built and measured. The weather and life have conspired to make it take this long. First if was too cold to paint until afternoon, but the gardeners and their "mow and blow" stuff would come in the afternoon - it only took one time of getting stuff blown into fresh paint to learn that lesson. I ran out of paint at inopportune times. The wind blew when the temperature was right - all reasons that painting took a long time.
A couple of weeks I was ready to put the thing together and realized that I needed some additional muscle. Saturday evening Ken and I worked together, built the last sections, and put it up. He even found a hole in the brick that probably held the old, trellis to the house, so we were able to secure the arbor rather permanently to the house.
The rose and hibiscus look terrible at the moment. I had to severely prune the rose; it was climbing through the little trellis and covering the hibiscus (which has never looked like much, but does have pretty blooms - apparently it was damaged by frost before we moved in, and was thought to be dead) weighing it down. I've fertilized and watered, and will put down new mulch next weekend. By then the rose will have new leaves, I'm sure.
There's a bonus too! Because this is an old house there have been many additions and changes over the years. There are two cable conduits to the shop from the house which carry electrical, telephone and computer lines. They are overhead at the entrance to the patio - the new arbor (and the rose, once it gets growing) will hide them!