How to Build a Deck
from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can EditBuilding a deck can add to the monetary value of your home as well as to your enjoyment of it, whether you host parties or sample the beauty of nature from it. Building your deck requires work and planning, but a properly planned and built deck can be an asset you can enjoy for years. Here are the steps to take when planning and building your deck.
Steps
Planning Your Deck- Know your local building codes regarding decking. The size of your home will have an impact on how large your deck can be, as well as its shape. In most cases, your deck will also be required to support a greater load than the floors in your home.
- Your home owner's insurance policy may not cover an accident that occurs on your deck if you didn't build your decking to comply with the building codes in your area.
- Obtain any necessary permits. Check with your local government agency regarding the need for a permit before building your decking, as well as any inspections that will be required during construction.
- Know the depth of the frost line in your area. The frost line is the depth to which the ground freezes in winter, taken over an average of a number of years. Some building codes require that when you build a deck, the support posts be sunk to a depth below the frost line. Even if it isn't required, sinking the support posts to this depth will keep the deck from buckling when the ground expands and swells when the water in it freezes.
- Decide on the size, style and placement of your deck. Your deck can either be free-standing or attached to the house. Although some building codes may be more relaxed on free-standing decks, most people find it more convenient to have their decks attached to the house.
- If you build your deck onto the house, you'll want to know where the rim joists and wall studs are located so you can secure the deck's ledger board, the support beam that attaches it to the house, to either of them.
- The size of your deck will determine the number of footings and posts you'll need to support the joists and deck boards, as well as the size and spacing of the joists and the size of the deck boards. Joists can be spaced 12, 16 or 24 inches (30, 40 or 60 centimeters) apart; common sizes for joists and deck boards are listed under "Things You'll Need."
- The height at which you build your deck determines whether you need to include railings, posts and steps. You won't need them for a deck built just above the ground, but you will if it is higher than that.
- Making a preliminary sketch of what you have in mind will help you in lining up materials and construction advice.
- Choose the materials to make your deck from. There are a number of hardwoods and composite materials from which you can build decking. Materials for deck boards range from the tropical Ipe and plastic to the more traditional redwood, cedar and pine. The framing, columns and posts, however, should be pressure-treated or otherwise decay-resistant wood as required by code.
- Mark the place where the top of the deck is to go. Usually, this will be the height of the interior floor and just below the threshold of any planned or current door that will open onto the decking. Use a level to draw a line on the siding the whole length of the deck.
- Mark the place where the bottom of the deck is to go. From the line you just marked, measure down the thickness of the deck boards (usually 1 to 1 1/2 inches, or 2.5 to 3.75 centimeters), plus the height of the ledger board. (If the ledger board is a 2 x 10, this will be 9.5 inches, or 23.75 centimeters.) Mark this line across the entire length of where the ledger board will go.http://pad3.whstatic.com/images/thumb/3/3e/Build-Decking-Step-7-preview.jpg/550px-Build-Decking-Step-7-preview.jpghttp://pad3.whstatic.com/images/thumb/3/3e/Build-Decking-Step-7-preview.jpg/240px-Build-Decking-Step-7-preview.jpghttp://d5kh2btv85w9n.cloudfront.net/b/b7/Build Decking Step 7.360p.mp4
- Remove the siding from where the ledger board will be mounted. If the siding is solid siding, you can cut it away with a circular saw and jig saw, provided you don't cut into the sheathing beneath the siding. If the siding is vinyl siding, you'll need a special tool to pry up the siding; after removing it, you'll need to re-mark the lines for top of the deck and the bottom of the ledger board on the sheathing.
- Ignore the steps in this section if you're planning to make a free-standing deck.
- Measure and cut the ledger board. Check its fit against the house before proceeding.
- If you plan to cover your house's rim joists with the deck's skirting board, cut the ledger board shorter to accommodate the width of the skirting board (usually 3/4 inch, or 1.9 centimeters) on either side.
- Mark off where the joists will go. First, mark off the deck's rim joists on the left edge of the ledger board. (These are usually 2 joists laid side-by-side for strength.) Then, mark the centers of where each intervening joist will go and measure half the joist's thickness from each of these marks on either side. Then, mark off the rim joists on the right edge of the ledger board. Draw lines across the ledger board surface to mark all the joist edges.
- Prepare the beam that will go opposite the ledger board. Cut the beam the same length as the ledger board. If you plan to have the joists butt flush against this beam (a flush beam), then use a framing square to align the edges of both beams and then copy the marks in full. If you plan to have the joists rest on this beam instead (a dropped beam), you'll only need to have marks across the top for reference.
- Most building codes require the opposite beam to be twice or three times as thick as the interior joists, so as with the rim joists, you'll have to cut multiple beams and sandwich them side-by-side. (If the deck is to be a free-standing deck, the ledger board beam would also have to be sandwiched with one or two other beams for strength.)
- Ignore this step if the deck is to be a free-standing deck.
- If you're building a wide deck, you can cut multiple deck boards to span the distance between the rim joists, with the places where two boards meet falling in the middle of a joist. Stagger these joints between each row of decking to make the deck look nicer.
- Periodically measure the distance from the front of the deck to each end of the last board laid. They should be equal; if not, decrease the gaps between boards slightly on the longer side and increase them slightly on the shorter side until the distances are equal again.
- If the last deck board is wider than the space to lay it, either narrow it or use a narrower board of the same type of decking material. If the board is narrower than the space available, take a wider board and narrow it as necessary.
- You'll need to have a stringer at either end of the staircase to attach the steps to and another stringer in the center if you have a wide or tall staircase. Lay the first stringer out with a framing square to find the rise and run, then transfer the marks to the other stringers. Cut out the step supports, then brace the stringers together and nail them to the deck's rim joist before securing them permanently with lag screws.
- Cut the steps to have a 3/4-inch (1.9-centimeter) overhang to either side of the stringer assembly to channel rain away from the stringers. Attach them to the stringers with screws or nails.
- Measure the distance between posts to find the length of the rails and cut them to that length.
- Vertical spindles usually need to be spaced to more than 4 inches (10 centimeters) apart and should be placed closer together if it will create even spacing over the entire deck. They can be attached to the rails with nails or screws, while the rails themselves attach to the posts with angle screws. (Use wooden blocks to prop up the rail sections while screwing them in.)
- Cut the stair posts to the correct height and angle with the help of a framing square, then install the bottom stair rails and hand rails. Figure the length of the stair rails by dividing the stair rise by the run, multiplying by the deck rail length, squaring the result, adding the square of the deck rail length and take the square root of the result. Cut the spindles to the right length, angled for the slope of the rail and install as described above for the deck spindles.
Warnings
- Before following the above instructions, check with your local building department for any special requirements not covered above that may supersede them.
Things You'll Need
- Deck posts (4 x 4s or 6 x 6s)
- Beams (4 x 6s, 4 x 8s or 4 x 10s, or double or triple layers of 2 x 6s, 2 x 8s or 2 x 10s)
- Joists (2 x 6s, 2 x 8s or 2 x 10s)
- Stair stringers (2 x 12s)
- Deck boards (2 x 4s, 2 x 6s or 5/4 x 6s)
- Stair treads (same material as deck boards)
- Railing posts (4 x 4s)
- Rails (2 x 4s or 2 x 6s)
- Spindles (2 x 2s)
- Skirting boards (1 x 8s, 1 x 10s or 1 x 12s)
- Concrete (ready-mixed or bagged)
- Concrete pier blocks
- Exterior caulk
- Construction glue
- Stainless steel drift pins (1/2-inch/1.25 centimeter diameter)
- Joist hangers
- Metal flashing (galvanized)
- Common and casing nails (galvanized or coated, 8-, 10- and 16-penny sizes)
- Screws (galvanized or coated, 2 1/2-inch/6.25 centimeter and 3 1/2-inch/8.75 centimeter)
- Lag screws and washers
- Carriage bolts, nuts and washers
Related wikiHows
- How to Build Simple Square Decking
- How to Build Deck Stairs
- How to Install Deck Piers
- How to Build Porch Steps
Sources and Citations
- http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/how-to/intro/0,,262821,00.html
- http://www.askthebuilder.com/634_How_to_Build_a_Deck.shtml
- http://www.hometime.com/Howto/projects/decks/deck_1.htm