I am planning to add a covered patio to the back of our house, but want to avoid touching the house enveloped for many reasons, the main ones being that disturbing the house envelope just increases the risk of issues down the road and doing so requires a permit while free-standing cover/pergola doesn't.
Please don't try to convince me to just do a ledger board attached to the house. I really don't want to do it nor do I want to use lumber.
So, I devised this plan and I'm looking for tips, pointers.
This is the patio cover I plan to buy: https://canopia.com/product/stockho...clear&attribute_product-series-name=stockholm
To "attach" it to the house, I plan to use three Maine Deck Brackets (https://deckbracket.com/product/deck-bracket/) bolted to the foundation wall (the house is slab on grade). Then I will bolt to each bracket 4x1" aluminum square tubing, which will serve as the back posts and tie them across with a 16' 6x1" aluminum beam, which will become an offset ledger board. I will then attach the above patio cover to this ledger board.
Because I don't want to drill holes for the brackets too close to the house wall plate, I will likely have to put them below the patio pavers, which are 3" thick. That means that the pavers will need to be cut around the aluminum posts.
The brackets specs show a downward load capacity of over 1000 lbs/ft. I was planning to bolt to the concrete foundation using four 1/2" thick stainless steel wedge anchors with a tar paper placed between the aluminum brackets and concrete to prevent corrosion.
Can/Should I use Tapcons instead? I've never used them, but it seems like they will be quicker to install. Are they steel under the blue coating? Will the coating wear off during installation and eventually cause galvanic corrosion reaction with the aluminum brackets?
I'm not sure what thickness of aluminum to specify for the posts. I am thinking of 0.125" would be plenty strong and majority of the load I expect will be on the bolts holding them to the brackets, so I need to find suitable 1/2" stainless steel hardware.
The front posts of the patio cover will be bolted through the patio pavers and into concrete footings. Those posts are 6x6" 1mm thick aluminum. I realize that the pavers on the footings will stay planted while the rest of the patio may move over time.
Thank you for pointers on the above and any other tips.
Please don't try to convince me to just do a ledger board attached to the house. I really don't want to do it nor do I want to use lumber.
So, I devised this plan and I'm looking for tips, pointers.
This is the patio cover I plan to buy: https://canopia.com/product/stockho...clear&attribute_product-series-name=stockholm
To "attach" it to the house, I plan to use three Maine Deck Brackets (https://deckbracket.com/product/deck-bracket/) bolted to the foundation wall (the house is slab on grade). Then I will bolt to each bracket 4x1" aluminum square tubing, which will serve as the back posts and tie them across with a 16' 6x1" aluminum beam, which will become an offset ledger board. I will then attach the above patio cover to this ledger board.
Because I don't want to drill holes for the brackets too close to the house wall plate, I will likely have to put them below the patio pavers, which are 3" thick. That means that the pavers will need to be cut around the aluminum posts.
The brackets specs show a downward load capacity of over 1000 lbs/ft. I was planning to bolt to the concrete foundation using four 1/2" thick stainless steel wedge anchors with a tar paper placed between the aluminum brackets and concrete to prevent corrosion.
Can/Should I use Tapcons instead? I've never used them, but it seems like they will be quicker to install. Are they steel under the blue coating? Will the coating wear off during installation and eventually cause galvanic corrosion reaction with the aluminum brackets?
I'm not sure what thickness of aluminum to specify for the posts. I am thinking of 0.125" would be plenty strong and majority of the load I expect will be on the bolts holding them to the brackets, so I need to find suitable 1/2" stainless steel hardware.
The front posts of the patio cover will be bolted through the patio pavers and into concrete footings. Those posts are 6x6" 1mm thick aluminum. I realize that the pavers on the footings will stay planted while the rest of the patio may move over time.
Thank you for pointers on the above and any other tips.
