We've been working on a small building. It's 10' x 12', with a 6' covered deck. It could be a small cabin, or a sauna. It would be easier to build if it was close to the ground, but I want to be able to get underneath, and I want the floor height to match the yurt.
The gable roof overlaps the yurt roof enough to give a dry passageway. |
2x8 beams at the perimeter, with 2x8 joists on joist hangers. Beams attached to the faces of posts. |
Beams attached to the sides of posts. It's stronger to notch posts, or to set beams on top of them. I wish I had put beams *under* the joists, as it's so much stronger. Then I probably could have dropped down to 2x6 joists and gotten a stronger floor. It might have made bracing simpler, too.
When we built the yurt, digging the footing holes became this never-ending nightmare, and we wanted to avoid a repeat. I think I overcompensated. I aimed first for 6 posts, but according to span tables the beams wouldn't be strong enough for a 10' span. So we split that one with another post, giving spans of 5', 5', and 6'. The lumber we found wasn't as good as I had planned for, so I decided to add still more posts. We're now up to 11. *sigh*
Lumber: 2x8 12', 2x8 16', 4x4 treated 10'. |
The treated 4x4s were chopped up in to posts. Left them long, since we can cut them down later. Then we attached a beam to 2 posts, and set the height & level. |
My plumb bob hanger has a 2" offset. |
Once we're plumb, added temporary bracing. |
The first joist. Doubled. Through-bolted. |
I don't advise you to copy this building method. Through-bolting is a little less secure than other methods of attaching to a post. Also, these bolts are near the end of the joist, where the wood is weaker. These bolts are 8" x 1/2" hot-dipped galvanized.
I didn't have a long enough drill bit, so we clamped the joist in place, drilled through it, removed the joist, and finished the drilling. I picked a snug hole size, and used a sledgehammer to drive the bolts in, which knocked a few things out of alignment. I know that tight is stronger, but I think a slightly bigger hole would have been a good idea. I did eventually buy a long drill bit to use elsewhere.
The joist doesn't really need to be doubled. The main reason is that it will be under a wall, so it provides a little wider bearing surface for the wall, instead of supporting it on edge. I don't know if that's actually important, since the wall is pretty rigid already. Alternately, I suppose I could have put blocking between this joist and the next one, at the same spacing as the studs. *shrug*
To get everything square, I needed another joist and beam. But once the 2nd beam goes in, it would interfere with access to the yurt *and* would get in the way of removing the yurt steps. So we had to do a bunch of stuff in one day.
In preparation, I used a shorter stick as a temporary beam, to get things close to square. Then on the big day, we removed the steps:
No steps! |
Nails ready for joists. |
My carpenter friend said that joist hangers can be a pain to work with. He suggested we attach the joists to beams with nails first, then come back later and add the hangers.
Dylan installed this joist hanger himself. |
Dylan is sure-footed. |
Once the deck-area joists were installed, we placed 5/4 x 4" cedar decking. It's planed smooth and the edges are round. This will be nice under bare feet.
5/4 is slightly more than 1" (and will shrink more when dry). The 4" is of course 3.5". I have 12' to cover, and 41 * 3.5" = 143.5". So I bought 21 sticks, 12' long, cut in half, for a total of $90.
We didn't fasten the decking, except for the first 1 and a cleat after the last one. So we can walk on it but I don't have to commit yet. I still need to work under the deck, so I can just pick up the pieces in the way.
Finally, we hauled the steps in to their new home. They're not perfectly level, but they work.