Dog House Plans 6

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    ing a Dog House http://www.ranum.com/fun/projects/dog_house/in

    22/02/2007

    In the Dog House

    (Or: if you're gonna build a dog house, plan ahead

    and make sure you've got room to sleep in it

    yourself, just in case)

    How do you say "I love you" to an animal that doesn't speak English? Well, P-nut would tell you that you givehim carrots. Jake and Miles would say you rub them,play Sockwith them, and feed them smelly stuff. The cats -they'd want you to sit still and be warm. But sometimes you just want to spoil your special friends. So...

    I began the "dog house project" in August 2003 and had it done by the end of the month. All told it was about 4days of work and 6 trips to Lowe's.

    The foundation is made of pressure-treated 4x6'es lag-screwed together with 2x4 cross-members. I cut notches at

    the end to allow moisture to escape and to allow 2x4s to be slid underneath in hopes that it might be possible touse the front-end loader bucket to slide it onto a hay cart if we ever need to move it. To make sure everythingwould last a good long time I painted 2 coats of creosote on the foundation to keep it sealed.

    Things I learned at this stage:

    If the foundation is not square, you will be hating life later.If the dimensions of the foundation are not a convenient multiple of the sheathing sheets you're going touse, you're going to be spending a lot of time lapping sheathing pieces and cursing yourself.

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    Here the framing and uprights are together. There are stiffeners inserted in the studs kind of at random. The jacksfor the front door and windows are partially completed but it's still rough.

    Things I learned at this stage:

    When builders nail 2 studs together at each corner of the building it's for good reason: it's a loteasier toattach the sheathing when you're aiming for a 4" area than a 1 3/4" area..

    Toe-nailing boards is a big drag. For $.50 you can get metal plates that support the corners. These makelife a lot easier and the resulting structure is lots stronger.

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    Building the trusses was easy. I thought that part would be hard. Basically, you figure out the amount ofoverhang you want on the eaves, then the angle of the roof, and the length of the ridge-board and computeeverything very carefully. Oryou build a truss and see how it looks - ask your wife - then iterate. I got it right the first time then duplicatedthem and everything was great. The trusses have notches cut to support them where they rest on the top boardsand I centered them over studs. If this was a real house it would not be to code because the trusses are too farapart. There are these little metal brackets that cost $.75 that can attach a truss to a rafter. Or you can spend allday nailing them and trying to get them straight. Your call. In this picture you can also see the jacks and framingfor the front windows and door. Katrina pointed out that "dogs like dark lairs; windows are not a good idea." Iwas crushed because I wanted to make cute little windows with curtains for them. So instead when I sheathed theinterior I didn't cut the holes for the windows on the inside but cut them on the outside. Then I painted the inside

    black. So it lookslike there are windows - which makes me happy - but it's still a dank little cave inside - which makes Miles andJake happy.

    Things I learned at this stage:

    If you're building a dog house, and don't know much about dogs, ask someone who knows what dogs like

    what you should aim for. The dogs don't speak English so you have to listen to them by proxy.

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    This is the framing at the door. you can see the sheathing is on, now. The exterior is composite barn sheathingthat has been primed with epoxy paint. The interior is tile-board set into a routed edge on 1" plywood that isscrewed into the foundation. The structure at this point was incredibly rigid. Here you can see the way thewindows were done: the back of the tileboard is painted black and not cut, but the sheathing is cut to give theappearance of a real window. The door is large enough that a human can comfortably crawl in. You can't see theroof from here but the roof is done with a double roof system that leaves the eaves open to a ridge vent. This is

    because the dogs are furry and can adjust better to cold than heat. So the roof is actually an active cooling system

    to transport the sun's heat from the roof away from the dogs. They have fur coats (and got them the ethical wayso all you anti-fur activists better leave them alone).

    Things I learned at this stage:

    Design your roofing system appropriately for your objectives. Non-human residents might not needcentral heat.

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    Here you can see the sheathing attached and the roof with the vented ridge. The vent is actually a corner piecefrom an aluminum siding kit - a nice square-edged black piece with angled perforations that are perfect forkeeping air out. The inner roof runs from the rafter just under the eaves to the center of the ceiling, so the upperroof competely floats on its own. To the right of the building you'll see some square grey things. Those aremarble tiles. When we bought the farmhouse I found about 12 square feet of marble composite tiles in the

    basement, stacked in the corner. Just the perfect thing for a dog house! After all, we can clean it with a gardenhose if they drag something really disgusting in there. Also, the cool stone might make the lair more comfortablein the summer. In the winter I will put a piece of carpet down and throw it away in the spring.

    Things I learned at this stage:

    Here is where I paid the price for not making sure my dimensions were "convenient" - each of the sides ofsheathing had to be pieced together, routed, and caulked. It took me twice as long to complete this stage asit would have if I had thought through sheathing dimensions first and made sure that the divisions wereeven and there was a stud near where each sheathing splice would be so I could screw the sheathingoverlap into a stud for extra strength.

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    Yes, I added a front porch. I thought "what would be finer than to have a place to lurk where the rain wouldn'thit your ears?" - adding the front porch and its roof was a day-long affair but it really makes the "chateau dedogue" look special. The porch posts are turned railing segments from a human-sized porch railing. [Update,May 2005: the porch posts are gone. Apparently they were fun to chew on and have since been eaten.Pressure-treated wood should not be used on components that your dogs are likely to eat!] The porch is made of2x4s in a rectangle with a supporting 2x4 down the center, so it cradles marble tiles that I cut with a tile saw tocomprise the floor. The roofing is asphalt shingle over tar felt paper, nailed down and caulked, and I dressed theedges up with soffit-like overhangs that encourage the water to run down at an angle instead of dripping onto the

    porch roof. I'm happy to say that they worked perfectly. The overhang on the eaves seems about right and theeaves make a daylight-shaded lair for the dogs to hang out under during the day. We put a 20x20 foot metal penaround the house so they have a protected area to hang out in. I painted the exterior with 2 coats of red oil barn

    paint and did all the trim with 4 coats of killz. Then it rained for a week. This picture shows Miles exiting hisnew chateau de dogue the day that they took over ownership of the place.

    Things I learned at this stage:

    Completing a fun project is delightful, especially when the residents are happy with the result!When I added the porch I had to correct for angular distortion in the foundation. It wasn't hard but it was a

    lot of fiddly adjusting and sawing off a tenth of an inch here and there until it was right.When you're levelling something with a spirit level make sure everything is levelled to the same standard.The porch roof is actually level (according to earth's gravitational field, anyhow) - the rest of the house isnot because the yard isn't. OOps. So the porch roof is visibly "off kilter." Katrina says that I did a good jobof making the chateau de dogue match typical rural Pennsylvania construction standards. That's acompliment, right? Or have I been dissed?The dogs don't care about any of that

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    .This is the chateau de dogue after a rainy week of occupation by its redneck residents. They got mud on stuff,chewed the porch posts, and generally broke the place in properly. We got a truckload of red hardwood mulch(matches the walls!) and covered the grass in the pen so now it's not sea of mud anymore.

    Things I learned at this stage:

    Chateau builders should not neglect landscaping

    By the time all was said and done it was no longer "the dog house" it was the "chateau de dogue" and theresulting structure weighs about 900-lbs and is the size of your average college dorm room.