carlsberg
Established Member
Hello everyone,
I have done some more work on the footings/base and have finally finished it off. Pictures taken also
First of all let me do a total spent on getting the base complete.
Having spent an additional £22.91 on some more gravel to sit on top of the weed membrane, and £33.73 on said membrane and a roll of 600mm DPC.
Total cost for the base is £252.20 and about 4 days of my own hard labour
I have ordered the timber which should get delivered next week, after the stuff is pressure treated.
Order consists of:-
all the 6 x 2 timber for the floor and roof
8x1 timber for cross-bracing roof, 4"x4" beams to hold up roof over veranda, and some 2x5 for the veranda rails
430 linear metres of T+G Floorboards to cover floor and roof.
530 linear metres of Loglap for external cladding
9 sheets of 60mm polystyrene insulation for under floor
a roll of Vapour Permeable Membrane, for under the Loglap
a tin of end grain treatment
All the timber above is pressure treated in a brown colour, except the veranda rails which I hope to varnish.
That little lot weighs in at £1467.67
I still need to buy approx 250m of 4x2 for the studwork, then some roofing felt.
That should get me a waterproof structure before the bad weather comes.
Ok, pictures as promised..
All concrete blocks are now mortared onto the footings. Each is block is level, and within 1/8 inch :shock: in height of adjacent blocks.
I am really pleased with the results, and should give me a solid level base to build on....which should result in a level roof???? :lol:
Now that all the dirty work is out the way, I am looking forward to start the build.
Now some replies to the comments I am very grateful for...
I have spoke with family who have lived in the property for a long time, they have never seen badgers or foxes....but probably every other type of animal!! Being in the countryside, surrounded by lots of farms, maybe there are much better places for these animals to live.
However I am going to surround the underneath with chickenwire, buried maybe 6" at the most.
Given that there will be no vegetation underneath, just gravel, chickenwire will stop most animals getting underneath, there really wont be much underneath to eat.
Having done a kind of risk assessment, I feel that the fact that i am building it poses a greater threat to the life of the shed than any other risks :lol:
Total spent on project so far is £1719.87 excluding any new tools
More updates next week, when hopefully the wood arrives and I can start & complete the floor structure.
In the meantime, I will enjoy reading the other workshop build threads, get a compressor, and hunt down some 4x2 CLS locally.
As usual, I thank you all for all the feedback you have given.
Carlsberg
I have done some more work on the footings/base and have finally finished it off. Pictures taken also
First of all let me do a total spent on getting the base complete.
Having spent an additional £22.91 on some more gravel to sit on top of the weed membrane, and £33.73 on said membrane and a roll of 600mm DPC.
Total cost for the base is £252.20 and about 4 days of my own hard labour
I have ordered the timber which should get delivered next week, after the stuff is pressure treated.
Order consists of:-
all the 6 x 2 timber for the floor and roof
8x1 timber for cross-bracing roof, 4"x4" beams to hold up roof over veranda, and some 2x5 for the veranda rails
430 linear metres of T+G Floorboards to cover floor and roof.
530 linear metres of Loglap for external cladding
9 sheets of 60mm polystyrene insulation for under floor
a roll of Vapour Permeable Membrane, for under the Loglap
a tin of end grain treatment
All the timber above is pressure treated in a brown colour, except the veranda rails which I hope to varnish.
That little lot weighs in at £1467.67
I still need to buy approx 250m of 4x2 for the studwork, then some roofing felt.
That should get me a waterproof structure before the bad weather comes.
Ok, pictures as promised..
All concrete blocks are now mortared onto the footings. Each is block is level, and within 1/8 inch :shock: in height of adjacent blocks.
I am really pleased with the results, and should give me a solid level base to build on....which should result in a level roof???? :lol:
Now that all the dirty work is out the way, I am looking forward to start the build.
Now some replies to the comments I am very grateful for...
Regarding the threat of animals nesting underneath.If chicken wire is to be used I suggest that it would need to be buried at least 1 foot down.
I have spoke with family who have lived in the property for a long time, they have never seen badgers or foxes....but probably every other type of animal!! Being in the countryside, surrounded by lots of farms, maybe there are much better places for these animals to live.
However I am going to surround the underneath with chickenwire, buried maybe 6" at the most.
Given that there will be no vegetation underneath, just gravel, chickenwire will stop most animals getting underneath, there really wont be much underneath to eat.
Having done a kind of risk assessment, I feel that the fact that i am building it poses a greater threat to the life of the shed than any other risks :lol:
I am going to buy a substantial compressor which will eventually live in the home it is going to build. I am going for an oil filled one, that goes upto 10bar.In my case I already have a large static compressor in the workshop, so buying something larger and heavier than the bare minimum wasn't really worthwhile for me.
Total spent on project so far is £1719.87 excluding any new tools
More updates next week, when hopefully the wood arrives and I can start & complete the floor structure.
In the meantime, I will enjoy reading the other workshop build threads, get a compressor, and hunt down some 4x2 CLS locally.
As usual, I thank you all for all the feedback you have given.
Carlsberg