Chumley
17th August 2007, 10:03 AM
Hi all,
Couple of questions about a gazebo...
If I was to make a square structure with a post on a stirrup in each corner, I guess I would bury the stirrup in a 600x600x600 block of concrete (based on what a builder did for my carport). That would give me .864 cubic metres of concrete to hold down the structure. What I plan to do, as I want a suspended floor, is to have 5 bearers to define the hex shape (see attached .jpg) - if I put 11 stirrups as in the diagram and used 450x450x450 concrete blocks it would give me just over 1 cubic metre of concrete holding down the structure. Is this valid/sensible/logical?
The short bearers will be 1600 long, the centre bearer 3200 the other 2 will be 2400 -- I plan a stirrup at the end of each bearer and one in the centre of the long bearer -- I will put the same number of joists going the other way, then floorboards going the third way (if you know what I mean). Bearers will be 100 x 75 treated pine LVL, joists 100 x 50 treated pine LVL, boards 50 x 19 hardwood. Can anyone tell me if this is enough to stop the floor from 'bouncing'?
Cheers,
Chumley
Couple of questions about a gazebo...
If I was to make a square structure with a post on a stirrup in each corner, I guess I would bury the stirrup in a 600x600x600 block of concrete (based on what a builder did for my carport). That would give me .864 cubic metres of concrete to hold down the structure. What I plan to do, as I want a suspended floor, is to have 5 bearers to define the hex shape (see attached .jpg) - if I put 11 stirrups as in the diagram and used 450x450x450 concrete blocks it would give me just over 1 cubic metre of concrete holding down the structure. Is this valid/sensible/logical?
The short bearers will be 1600 long, the centre bearer 3200 the other 2 will be 2400 -- I plan a stirrup at the end of each bearer and one in the centre of the long bearer -- I will put the same number of joists going the other way, then floorboards going the third way (if you know what I mean). Bearers will be 100 x 75 treated pine LVL, joists 100 x 50 treated pine LVL, boards 50 x 19 hardwood. Can anyone tell me if this is enough to stop the floor from 'bouncing'?
Cheers,
Chumley