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20x40 Mezzanine

Hooksdj

Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2013
Messages
11
I have a 40x60 shop on which one end I want to put a mezzanine up in. I would like the underneth to be as open as possible. That being said, I am setting this up on one end of the shop so the wall will be one side of mezzanine. Post on the wall side have a 8x8 on each corner and 2 ea. 8x8 14' and 12' (making up the 40' length. The other end of the mezzanine will be the open shop area. I plan on putting up 2 ea. 6x6 post set at the same distance as the 14' and 12' post on the wall side. I am planning on running 2x12 as joist the entire 20' span. I have been told I would have to use some rather heavy sawn lumber of 8x10 or maybe 10x12. My question, I was hoping to use 3 or 4 ea. 2x12 sandwiched with 1/2 plywood in between. Fastened together with glue, and 3/8 bolts.

Am I on the right track here?
 
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cyamaha2007

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Apr 20, 2009
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2,001
Location
St.Charles MO
Well im no engineer but are you trying to clear span 40ft? Look up how to make a header with dimensional lumber. That will give you a nail pattern nail type and such.
 
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Hooksdj

Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2013
Messages
11
Here is a layout of what I was thinking. I could either build the beam in multiple sections and have them met half way overtop the 6x6 beams or just make the beam continuous and set atop the 6x6 beams. Note The number of joist shown in the drawing is just to represent the direction of them. There will be many more than what is shown in my drawing.
 

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zcar751

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Apr 15, 2013
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831
Location
Knoxville, TN
You didn't mention what you want to put on the mezzanine. This is critical as you will need it to be load rated. No reason to put up something that will only hold 40 lbs per square foot. Also critical is where you live, is it a commercial property, are you running a business from this location. You may have permitting issues, need a professional engineer to sign of on drawings.
If you don't need any of that I would talk to someone who make trusses and tell them the span you want to cover and they can provide you with suggestions as to beams, post and securing options. Personally, I would look at floor trusses. they will easily clear a twenty foot span. Other options include engineered beams.
Take the time to do it right because you don't want it to cave in on you one day.
 
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Hooksdj

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Joined
Apr 22, 2013
Messages
11
At the moment it will only hold a gym with a bathroom and basic storage, nothing to awfully heavy. Later I do intend on making some sort of living quarters for my kid/s when they get older and hopefully go to college.
 

ADSR

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Jan 12, 2013
Messages
10,713
I build houses for a living. Don't even play around with it if it will support life. Just put in a call to a local truss builder and ask them your options. They will tell you what to use for free. I've seen guys put in HUGE beams and spend way more time and money than they needed to, only to find they could have done much better with a smaller, lighter gang truss.
 

sasky

Member
Joined
Aug 15, 2010
Messages
16
I have a 40x60 with mez across back wall. Not slot to it. Busy working right now but sounds like rain by the weekend. I can take some pics if u like
 

larry_g

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Joined
Apr 28, 2007
Messages
16,874
Location
oregon
I have something similar. Check out my build link below. My mez is 12x36.

lg
no neat sig line
 
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Hooksdj

Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2013
Messages
11
I had a engineer runs some calculations for me but it looks like he went a bit overboard. Ive gone back to him a few times but the responses do not help me much. He Has listed 8x12 sawn lumber for my beams and then 2x12 equivalent I joist topped by 1" 1/4" t&g plywood. I'm thinking of using 4 ea 2x12" glued and bolted together together to get my beam dimension, then use 2x12 as my joist topped by 3/4" OSB or Plywood. With the A room going in underneath i was thinking it could add support as well. I'm out of the country now but will post some pics upon returning home. Any pics anyone has to offer would be appreciated.
 
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