A Pavilion Perched High on a Ledge

2 MIN READ
This article was originally published on Journal of Light Construction

When Hayward Design Build recently finished work on a screened-in pavilion located on a bluff overlooking Vermont’s Lake Champlain, it marked the end of a multi-year project building a high-performance home on a steep, rocky site (see “Pinning a Deck to Ledge”).

Designed by the company in conjunction with the clients and their architect, the 16-by-20-foot freestanding building provides shelter and a bug-free environment for lake gazing and small get-togethers (above).

The pavilion is supported by 8×8 PT posts bearing on concrete piers attached to ledge; to prevent racking, the posts are reinforced with steel-rod X-bracing. The floor is framed with 2×12 PT stock, while 6×6 corner and midspan posts were installed to hold up the pavilion’s low-slope roof, which is covered with a fully adhered TPO membrane (above).

For the decking, workers ran a couple of 1×6 ipe boards around the deck’s perimeter, then infilled the floor area (more of a traditional wood floor than a deck) with 1×4 T&G ipe to avoid insect-penetrating gaps. Around the perimeter of the floor, a strip of perforated linear drain was let in under the screened openings for drainage (above, left). According to project manager Jim Bradley, the goal was to allow any wind-driven rain blown through the screening to drain out at the edge, though the clients were on board with occasionally having to break out a squeegee after strong rainstorms.

At the walls, 1/4-inch tempered glass panels were run up to a 2×4 ipe mullion 36 inches off the deck (matching the adjacent deck guardrail height). The panels were then set in the openings with site-ripped 5/8-inch-square ipe stops (above, right).

Above the mullions, workers installed heavy-duty bronze metal screening in custom frames, again setting the frames in the openings with ipe stops (above). For the entry, the company special-ordered a Larson screen door and refitted it with the heavy-duty bronze screening.

The space was wired for lighting, a ceiling fan, and sound. Then Bradley and his crew installed trim, finishing the ceiling and area above the screen openings with T&G western red cedar.

Click here to see aerial of finished project

Photos by Jim Bradley and Tim Healey, drone photo by Nate Hayward

About the Author

Tim Healey

Tim Healey is a senior editor at JLC.

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