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[email protected] 15-05-2005 04:06 AM

Have Any Tips On Building A Pergola?
 
I've been searching around for tips on building a pergola. While I've
found some good ideas, I was wondering if anyone could share some of
their "hands-on" tips.

I'm want to build a free-standing box pergola over my
soon-to-be-constructed patio, a 13'x11' patio that will be made with
pavers.

Here are a few questions I have:

1) What type of wood should I use? Is cedar be a better choice that
treated lumber?

2) I'm not going to use paint. What is the best wood protectant for a
hot, humid and damp Florida climate?

3) Should I just sink the poles like you would a fence pole, with a bag
of cement?

Any ideas or tips you can share will be greatly appriciated.

Patrick


Vox Humana 15-05-2005 01:18 PM


wrote in message
oups.com...
I've been searching around for tips on building a pergola. While I've
found some good ideas, I was wondering if anyone could share some of
their "hands-on" tips.

I'm want to build a free-standing box pergola over my
soon-to-be-constructed patio, a 13'x11' patio that will be made with
pavers.

Here are a few questions I have:

1) What type of wood should I use? Is cedar be a better choice that
treated lumber?

2) I'm not going to use paint. What is the best wood protectant for a
hot, humid and damp Florida climate?

3) Should I just sink the poles like you would a fence pole, with a bag
of cement?

Any ideas or tips you can share will be greatly appriciated.


I would recommend that you browse the book racks at you local home
improvement store. They will have several nice books on garden structures
with discussions on wood selection, construction, and maintenance.



William Brown 15-05-2005 03:32 PM

I helped my son build one in California.

wrote:
I've been searching around for tips on building a pergola. While I've
found some good ideas, I was wondering if anyone could share some of
their "hands-on" tips.

I'm want to build a free-standing box pergola over my
soon-to-be-constructed patio, a 13'x11' patio that will be made with
pavers.

Here are a few questions I have:

1) What type of wood should I use? Is cedar be a better choice that
treated lumber?


I would prefer anything over treated lumber. My son used cedar; at home
I made my trellises from redwood. Both are nice looking.

2) I'm not going to use paint. What is the best wood protectant for a
hot, humid and damp Florida climate?


My son painted his. On my trellises, I use flood cwf-uv (a clear finish
with uv protection) and it looks nice, but we have to renew it about
every other year (we have winters here). Of course, Florida has its own
climate, so I would ask around there.

3) Should I just sink the poles like you would a fence pole, with a bag
of cement?


California had specific requirements for mounting (due to earthquakes, I
think). I would check with your local authorities to see if they have
like requirements, probably something to do with hurricanes.

I don't like to sink wood into holes or dirt; water sits in there and
can cause rot. I think a better way is to sink bolts into concrete,
then get brackets to mount the poles on top of the bolts.

Any ideas or tips you can share will be greatly appriciated.


My son's was on his patio next to the house, which naturally turned out
not to be level, so we had to choose between level and parallel to the
house.

It was a 2.5 person job, even with some clamps. Every once in a while
we had to call out one of our wives when we just needed an extra pair of
hands, or someone to stand aside and look at it to see if we had it aligned.

Patrick


Kay Lancaster 15-05-2005 10:42 PM

On 14 May 2005 20:06:46 -0700, wrote:
1) What type of wood should I use? Is cedar be a better choice that
treated lumber?


Check with your building codes office and with the local extension service.
Chances are they can answer your questions fairly easily. You've got both
decay and termites to deal with.

Kay


Eyebright 16-05-2005 12:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by
I've been searching around for tips on building a pergola.

Any ideas or tips you can share will be greatly appriciated.

Patrick

make the cross-beams run along the line of the walk way not across it otherwise to quote Gertrude Jekyl you will " switch off the sky ".

Mark Anderson 16-05-2005 07:45 PM

In article says...
I'm want to build a free-standing box pergola over my
soon-to-be-constructed patio, a 13'x11' patio that will be made with
pavers.


Last year I built a free standing pergola using standard 1x pine boards
and 2x2 posts (2x4s ripped in half). It's a reduced size because I don't
have a lot of room but it makes for a nice trellis for vines. Mine is
anchored in a base made of a 2x4 framed box that is held down by 4 22"
planters. I worried a bit about wind shear but after watching it for one
year, it was very sturdy in 50+mph wins and the planters that hold it
down make its center of gravity very low. The cross braces are 1x3.5" so
they don't catch much wind. I'm sure a direct hit by a tornado (or
possibly a hurricane) would knock it over but it would get knocked over
even if it were anchored to the roof. I used two coats of stain and two
coats of Minwax polyurethane and it still looks new after one Chicago
winter.

Here's a pic taken late fall last year:

http://www.brandylion.com/images/pergola.jpg




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