Ever since I was pretty young, I've been wanting to build a tree house. Around the age of 10 or 12, my parents got me this old play house/fort, and put it in part of the back yard that they labeled as being "Mine". Over the years, as I've gotten older, it's gotten smaller and smaller compared to my own size, and a couple years back, I decided that it would have to go and be replaced by something much bigger and better. Now, as an adult of nearly 25 years, I've been deciding to replace the old play fort with something like a treehouse/apartment. I've done a lot of basic designing, but I thought I'd ask for tips on how to do the framing. I hope to utilize this as an actual apartment, of sorts, but I wish to keep costs down to a low so that I don't have to worry about going over my mediocre budget.
Due to the size limits, as you can imagine, this is a massive undertaking, so I'd like any tips anyone could share for to pull this gargantuan project off. Does anyone know any tips for doing the framing and the like, for this? I plan on having parts of it being supported by poles of sorts, and I'd use that old play fort, but the sides are starting to go a light green, from mold, and I don't know if it's started to rot with how many nails I put into that with "additions" for to protect it in water fights with squirt guns and the like. (The fact alone that it's lasted for over 13-15 years is a testament to how well it was made.) The spot is rather well shaded, so I don't think too much rain water would get on it, but I still can't tell how easy or hard this would be. Tips would be appreciated, and I hope to achieve this during this summer.
Ranma Bushiko
Due to the size limits, as you can imagine, this is a massive undertaking, so I'd like any tips anyone could share for to pull this gargantuan project off. Does anyone know any tips for doing the framing and the like, for this? I plan on having parts of it being supported by poles of sorts, and I'd use that old play fort, but the sides are starting to go a light green, from mold, and I don't know if it's started to rot with how many nails I put into that with "additions" for to protect it in water fights with squirt guns and the like. (The fact alone that it's lasted for over 13-15 years is a testament to how well it was made.) The spot is rather well shaded, so I don't think too much rain water would get on it, but I still can't tell how easy or hard this would be. Tips would be appreciated, and I hope to achieve this during this summer.
Ranma Bushiko
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