I'd USE the boat. Once you start using one, the motivation to work on one falls to the wayside quite a bit.
I've never understand the motivation for all the added work and weight anyway, esp in a 14ft'r.
The difference between a just barely 14ft and even a 15ft tin boat can be significant. Go to a 16ft & you'll have plenty of room for a nice flat deck, seats (pedestal or other), storage, forward casting deck AND possibly a windscreen to protect the Admiral

That'd be in a console boat, but even a 16ft semi-v open bench boat like what you have now, would still seem huge compared to your 14ft'r. Esp in width.
I'll be using epoxy on any an all plywood for all my aluminum boat builds, there are a few
Run what you've got this summer and early fall. And start to squirrel away some boat funds. If you decide you can't stand the semi-v hull underfoot, SELL it at the start of the spring season. Once it gets to be November in most of the US 15-18ft tin boat projects will become much more plentiful & cheaper then they are now.
So you'd be a 2 boat household from the time you bring the project boat home until you sell the current boat. Or once you can't be using the 14ft'r, you could sell it before buying a bigger boat, but if you don't finish it this winter you'll be boatless. And more importantly, you'll likely sell it at a discount rather then a premium at the start of the spring season.