Implement shed on an incline

   / Implement shed on an incline #11  
Thanks!

I am slowly working on it, milling every piece of lumber, there is no way I am going to pay $50 for a bloody 6x6 - 8' beam.
In December, they were $75!!
might be better off using masonry building blocks anyway
 
   / Implement shed on an incline #12  
I built an implement shed that is 100’ long. Over that 100’ it drops about a foot. I built the shed level. I built the columns for the shed the exact same length and used sono tubes for the footings. On one end they are almost flush with the ground and on the other they are sticking out of the ground a foot. I used a rotary laser level to set the sono tubes at the same height.
 
   / Implement shed on an incline
  • Thread Starter
#13  
I built an implement shed that is 100’ long. Over that 100’ it drops about a foot. I built the shed level. I built the columns for the shed the exact same length and used sono tubes for the footings. On one end they are almost flush with the ground and on the other they are sticking out of the ground a foot. I used a rotary laser level to set the sono tubes at the same height.

That's how I did my porch - but I used square wooden forms.
 

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   / Implement shed on an incline #14  
By building plumb and level, the weight is placed to bear directly down on the walls and posts. Any angles causes that weight to push “sideways” along with down. This puts stress on every joint and fastener trying to hold it together.
As the wood dries out these all loosen making the structure lean more over time.
200 years worth of Appalachian barn builders agree. Just look around.
 
   / Implement shed on an incline #15  
   / Implement shed on an incline #16  
After years of parking my tractor under the tree - and tarp - with implements all around it, I decided to put up a simple shelter to protect it all. The place for it is on an incline, maybe 5 degrees. I should still build it with the roof horizontal when looking from the front, right? The roof will be sloped front to back of course but right to left it should not follow the terrain? I am not sure where it popped from in my head, maybe from the fence I built?
I would do whatever it took to make the building level.
 
   / Implement shed on an incline #17  
The main reason I always make a level pad of dirt for a new building, a few feet larger than the building on all sides, is for water drainage. If you build a level roof over sloping ground, you will still have rain water washing through the building every time it rains hard, snow melting, etc. Or even your standard gable roof can have one side dumping water that just flows back through the building. Thats not a good environment for storing much of anything.

Drainage!
 

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