Timber Frame Garden Room

(click photos to enlarge)

Timber Frame startThe start to the timber frame garden room project made of eastern white pine milled with a planed finish.

P1010003All the roof panels I had fabricated from a heavy gauge yet light weight steel with a solid 6″ foam core. All panels were screwed together through the fabricated flanges and then screwed straight into the roof rafter timbers.

The foam/steel panels acted as a webbing to keep the structure from twisting from side to side.

Heavy steel brackets were fabricated and bolted into strategic points of the timber frame for the additional support.                                                                                                                                                                foam/steel panels P1010001

P1010003 stone on shower wall corner Each step will illustrate the thought process in bringing a very natural and beautiful structure into completion as we move along in this illustrated process.

And a very happy home owner watches each process unfold

P1010008_2Looking out after most of the completion..finished looking out Fireplace and stone walls are about half finished.P1010093_2..and yet further along..

fireplace stone work partially done For the ceilings we used primed bead board. P1010090

And the final photos of the completed project.P1010043

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SLIDE_SHOW_BELOW http://picasaweb.google.com/andybuildz/GardenRoom09#slideshow/5365871698594548514

2 Responses to “Timber Frame Garden Room”

  1. This stuff is VERY interesting, and the Timberframe Garden Room, beautiful! Well, I’m going up to meet with a few folks with different suggestions, one truss guy that claims he can stack 3 attic trusses on top of each other and have my A-Frame “Dried in” in a Week, ( I would do the Gable ends, 37′ in the air, scary, and have no price as yet) Other Idea is my guy David Martini from Southeast Domes (drew my blueprints) will make me a kit for $7400 bucks out of 16′ #2 lumber (not stamped) for half up front. third plan is to have a local mill cut and debark about 16 of my Straightest Pine trees, plane em’, angle em’, stamp em’ bring em back and bingo, get a crane in there and theres my A-frame. This last plan would require alot of time i really cant spend up there, nor can I pay for that amount of labor. I am laying awake at night milling logs in my head…

  2. Like I said…I’m the last person for you to talk to b/c I love your last idea…milling your own…but you need to do what’s comfortable for you other-wise why bother…but milling your own trees…find a way…lol
    http://www.forestryforum.com/index.php

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