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Small deck questions...

nahuebsch82

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Feb 7, 2013
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444
Location
Portland, Or
Not sure if deck goes in the "flooring" section or not but lets give it a go!

We are renting a end unit of a 4-plex, our parking spot is right in front of our unit, however, there is a mossy and muddy area (supposed to be grassy) that goes all the way across all the units front entryways. This spot is about 3-4ft across and about 100ft long. Additionally, in front of our unit it drops a good foot from the parking space to the entryway.

Landlord isn't going to do anything about it and we are tired of walking through the muck, so I thought perhaps making a small "deck" with a step to account for the slope change. We have some decent pallets at work I grabbed (free) and can finish them with a plainer and/or wax, figure maybe 4ft wide by 3ft long and a step down....

thoughts?
 
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nahuebsch82

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Joined
Feb 7, 2013
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444
Location
Portland, Or
Guess I didn't add many questions lol.

So, I've never build a deck, with such a small one would it be nessisary to cement the posts or need the concrete footings?

I like the grainyness of the wood and am not sure if I'm going to sand/plain down so for treatment i thought about beeswax or candle wax (cheaper) would either also make it waterproof?
 

larry_g

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Apr 28, 2007
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16,858
Location
oregon
I had to replace my deck boards his year and if you would like some free decking it's yours. It is the composite stuff. Contact me with a PM if your interested. I'm just south of Salem

lg
no neat sigline
 

CTyankee

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Jan 13, 2013
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3,792
Location
CT
Is one pallet big enough to make the whole "deck"? It's not pressure treated I assume.
If your planning on renting for awhile, I'd just build a simple frame the size you need. Set and level it on 4 large pavers or blocks and deck it with some composite decking material. The weight alone should keep it in place. If not, you can always drive a couple of stakes and screw them to the frame to stabilize it.
 
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nahuebsch82

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Feb 7, 2013
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444
Location
Portland, Or
One larger pallet may be lol, I'm not too concerned about making it perfect or putting much $$ into it. Just want it functional
 

bczygan

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Nov 4, 2009
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22,002
Location
DETROIT! Arsenal of Scrappers
Not sure if deck goes in the "flooring" section or not but lets give it a go!

We are renting a end unit of a 4-plex, our parking spot is right in front of our unit, however, there is a mossy and muddy area (supposed to be grassy) that goes all the way across all the units front entryways. This spot is about 3-4ft across and about 100ft long. Additionally, in front of our unit it drops a good foot from the parking space to the entryway.

Landlord isn't going to do anything about it and we are tired of walking through the muck, so I thought perhaps making a small "deck" with a step to account for the slope change. We have some decent pallets at work I grabbed (free) and can finish them with a plainer and/or wax, figure maybe 4ft wide by 3ft long and a step down....

thoughts?

I would not think you could do anything to real property without express written permission of the owner. I would want that for my own protection in any case.

Don't you have a sidewalk for access to your unit?

Photos?

Bill
 

Jinks

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Aug 28, 2012
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2,885
Location
Daytona Beach
Pallets usually have too much gap between boards & the boards aren't thick enough to support people walking on them for long. Unless you have some real serious pallets you're setting yourself up for some liability.
 
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nahuebsch82

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Feb 7, 2013
Messages
444
Location
Portland, Or
There is a walkway but to not walk through Mud you have to go all the way down to the last unit. Also the other side is nothing but the same


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Kevin54

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Jan 12, 2005
Messages
29,341
Location
Urbana, Ohio
Ditto on the stone. Ask the landlord if you can put down stone if you pay for it. Add some larger stone for a base, then some smaller 3/4" sized stone for a top covering. Tamp it down well.

I wouldn't think the landlord would mind much seeing that there is no grass growing in there. Maybe get everyone along there that has the same problem, and get everyone to go together for a larger truckload of stone. Then get everyone together on a Saturday or something and all of you along there spread the stone out.
 

James-W

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Feb 3, 2013
Messages
12,432
Location
Southeastern Wisconsin
I like the large pavers idea. You can even use construction adhesive to hold them together and build a really nice walkway that will be very solid and won't deteriorate.
 
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