cobra46 said:
G$
Nice island and pool. Thanks for sharing your pics and experience.
BBQG was awesome for those who wanted to build their own BBQ islands. Too bad their gone. As more people like G$ share, this site will grow to be like the old BBQG.
For those of you thinking about starting a project like this, Dr. Dave sells plans on his web site. Although I have not purchased a set, many from the old site had nothing but good things to say about them. Also his advice here is top notch and used to be very timely. I can only imagine that he spends far less time here than he used to spend there.
Thanks cobra46. My constructiuon methodology and materials was very similar to what DrDave advised, although I did not need plans: I just sketched out what I thought it would take and made a couple minor changes as I went.
I used steel studs and tracks for the framing - the kind available at Lowes and Home Depot. I had never worked with steel studs before, and there was a learning curve to it, but anyone could do it. I used stud screws and rivets just to try both ways. If I had it to do over again, I would rivet the whole thing, but either way works.
When you start, the studs feel flimsy. The more you put together, the stronger it gets. The trick is keeping everything level and square. To cut the studs, I used an abrasive chop saw, and/or heavy duty meatal snips.
I had an electrician move my pool light box and receptacle, and chain out more receptacle outlets for me.
After framing with the steel, I skinned it with HardiBacker cement backer board by securing the backerboard to the studs with 'Backer-on' screws. I then used fiberglass tape and thinset on the seems and corners. Tile came next.
I had a stucco person do the stucco so that it matched my house. He applied 2 thin coats right over the backer board - no lathe. I did apply cement glue to the backer board prior to stucco to assist in adhesion.
EVERYTHING I needed to know I learned searching on line, especially the old BBQ Galore site. I also consulted a builders doc called the "steel framing guide" whichyou can find in .pdf form.
Again, I did not use pre made plans. I made a fairly detailed sketch and started construction. I made modifications as I went, but they were minor and few. Before I started, I knew all my dimmensions for fixtures, doors, etc., and I knew where I wanted it to fit.