My Pallet Shed

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Today I've something not related to painting for a change...

A few months back, I came across this website  of various people making entire sheds out of pallets and reclaimed/recycled wood. I liked the idea so much and since I'd already been making various bits and pieces with pallets and worked on some bigger project (including a roof) in my own house. I decided to give it a go.
Here's the project so far...

First was the job to clear a whole area. I had this spot at the back of my garden that used to be a 7ft mound of rubble. I had spend a whole winter clearing it, saving every stone to build the walls and ground and every wheelbarrow of soil to even out places in the garden. I had time and I wasn't going to kill myself doing it so it took me about 4 months, shifting only just 10 wheelbarrows everyday.




I initially thought about doing a wee garden patch there with raised beds but there just wasn't enough light coming it as between the trees and the existing shed. So I decided to use the space to build my pallet shed.
First step was to find a source of pallets of course. Best is to find a couple of small offices or supplies shops that don't bother recycling pallets. Industrial estates often leave pallets outside their warehouse as well for people to take. just drive around one Saturday and ask. You'll need a LOT of pallets.

Then flattening the area and making an even bedrock. The whole place is already full of massive rocks barely filled by soil so it's already pretty stable. I just put a 6 inch layer of rocks for draining purposes.

The structure is simple. I just nail or screw the pallets to the floor and together. I use sections of pallets too to make cross braces that keep them together.





It takes a good bit of cutting measuring to get everything to fit properly as nothing is really square and in a perfect straight line.
I made the whole structure two pallets high, about 7 and a half foot high. Before I started on the roof i just wanted to get a feel of how the outside was going to look like. A friend suggested I use a damp barrier so i went around a few industrial building sites and asked them if they had a few old tarps in their skips. After a few enquiries I had enough sections to cover the entire county,
I started dismantling pallets and put them straight flat on the walls (first photo) until a friend pointed out that water wouldn't run down the wall, but instead collect and rot the wood so I took it all appart and did a proper cladding by overlapping the planks (second photo) -it seems obvious now!
This will use up a lot more wood of course but it's the only way to do it properly.




Next job was the roof structure.I hadn't done this before so I looked up online. There are tons of youtube videos on how to best do a roof. I had some leftover 2x3s and got a reclaimed bit of 6x2 leftover from a building site. perfect!
I did the roof in one afternoon but you will need help lifting and  setting up the central beam (my wife gave me a hand... it's a 5 min job). Take your time. Think about what you're doing and what the purpose of each section of wood is. Next think I knew, I had a structure solid enough to dance on it.

I then used planks from dismantled pallets to do the roof cover. You don't need to overlap them there and they don't need to be completely tight as I'll put a tarp on top and some sheets of roof tar covers afterwards.

Once the roof was done I covered it with some sections of old tarps I had recovered from building sites. Make sure you overlap them from the bottom up.
Once this was done, I added a second over of tar roof felt. I had 2 rolls of it already but they weren't enough so I had to buy an extra one. There about 25 euros each.

Then, with the roof secure I can now start the slow process of cladding the entire shed using yet more dismantled pallet. It's a slow and tough process, especially the dismantling part, and quite a workout so you won't need to get into the gym for a while. This will take a LOT of pallets. The from wall on the picture bellow took about 18 to 20 pallets alone.



I also line the inside of the shed, using the thicker planks on the bottom of the shed and some relaimed sections of ply for the wall -again, I got the ply from a site, they were using it to mask the work site. once sanded and trimmed it's perfect. It'll be painted also later so it doesn't have to be perfect right now.


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After a few months of work, I'm glad to say that I'm nearing completion. The shed will be my surfboard shaping bay and is made from pallets and reclaimed wood and bits. Total cost is under €170 , for screws, roof felt a few electrical fittings etc...
It just needs a door (in progress), some wood protection on the outside and a clearer blue inside and a couple more pieces here and there but it's fully functional now, dry and water tight.





I've since them made a few more smaller pallet projects, like new desks for my painting studio and work area :
Since my room was a bit of an awkward shape and had no square angles whatsoever, I could never find furniture that fitted properly, so I made these using pallets and a couple of lengths of reclaimed 3x2 for the frame.

One Evening At Riley's









"One Evening at Riley's"


Acylics on Canvas
Tick edge, unframed
39x12 (99x30.5 cm)
€690 (approx $865)




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One evening at Riley's

Another 'almost done' easel shot, another Irish wave : "One evening at Riley's" . This is for a series I'm trying to get accepted at a group show in Kenny's Galery in Galway.

Meeting with them Tuesday, so fingers crossed. Wish me luck

nodp
It's good to be back home, back in the water surfing, AND it's good to get back to using proper paint and canvases. Here's a couple of pieces I'm working on at the moment, using some of the techniques I've practices on with the ipad over my pas few weeks away. These are my "interview" pieces for a show coming up here in Galway for the Volvo races. Fingers crossed...

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