Mavrik02
Silver Member
Last summer/fall we finished the house and moved in. most of the work was on the inside (and stonework for the outside). This year we are doing the outside land and hard scaping.
The bridge has been up for almost a year now. It is steel construction (5 large I beams) with a 2" (or so) grate for the decking. It is 24' long and ~14' wide. It is very sturdy.
I was thinking about what to do with it. It is painted black and doesn't look too bad as is but...the house is wood and I will be finishing the hardscaping in rock and thinking about using some wood fencing along the driveway.
I though about maybe using some rough cut 2x10 to bolt onto the grating to make it look like a wood bridge but am not sure how that would hold up (the other thing to consider is that as is the snow just falls through the grate so you can always see the bridge no matter how much we get).
I also thought to add some kind of guide rail. I wasn't thinking it had to stop a car from going over the side but just provide a visual reference for drivers.
Or...like I said I could just leave it as is.
Does anyone have any ideas?
Thanks,
Fred
The bridge has been up for almost a year now. It is steel construction (5 large I beams) with a 2" (or so) grate for the decking. It is 24' long and ~14' wide. It is very sturdy.
I was thinking about what to do with it. It is painted black and doesn't look too bad as is but...the house is wood and I will be finishing the hardscaping in rock and thinking about using some wood fencing along the driveway.
I though about maybe using some rough cut 2x10 to bolt onto the grating to make it look like a wood bridge but am not sure how that would hold up (the other thing to consider is that as is the snow just falls through the grate so you can always see the bridge no matter how much we get).
I also thought to add some kind of guide rail. I wasn't thinking it had to stop a car from going over the side but just provide a visual reference for drivers.
Or...like I said I could just leave it as is.
Does anyone have any ideas?
Thanks,
Fred