Garden shed on lawn
Well, here in TX last week we have a servere rain storm and over a
thousand trees were torn out of the ground. Anything can up and go.
We have a wood construction shed, not plastic or vinyl and we put it
in a protected part of the yard as close to the fence the code would
allow. It should be okay
On 23 Oct 2006 06:51:16 -0700, "JB" wrote:
OK, that sounds good to me. Looking at one on the B&Q website it says
the base should be 300mm wider than the dimensions specified.
Anyway, this maybe another stupid question, but it can get fairly windy
here (not hurricane standards), but I take it there is no fear of these
things blowing over????
Thanks.
JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
"JB" wrote in message
ups.com...
Jangchub wrote:
On 23 Oct 2006 01:52:42 -0700, "JB" wrote:
I would like to get a smallish garden shed (8' by 6' for example) for
general garden storage, i.e. lawnmower and other garden tools. What I
want to know is can I just place this directly on the lawn (the lawn is
flat), or do I need foundations of some kind? I live in the North East
of Engalnd if this is applicable.
Yes, you really should use a foundation. It doesn't have to be
concrete. Our 8x12 shed is placed on top of a simple wood construted
foundation.
Thanks, for the info.
Not wanting to sound TOO stupid, but I would really like specifics
about the wooden frame. For example for your 8'x12' case, do I just
need two 8'x2"x2" and two 12'x2"x2" bits of wood, nail them up into a
square and then that's it, or would I require something more elaborate?
Thanks again.
How about three 4x8 foot sheets of 3/4" thick plywood, laid over a frame
made of treated 2x4" wood? You might need to trim an inch or three off the
plywood, unless the internal floor size really is 8'x12'.
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