I've been wanting a good, large structure for a tire swing for some time now, so I've recently been noodling over the design and costs. My dad said he'd be visiting this previous week, and he asked if there was a project he could help with, since we tend to bond over building things. So I put the tire swing project on the fast track and we built this:
It's essentially an octagon, but two side opposite each other are 12 feet long, while the other six sides are only 10 feet long. The two twelve foot wide sides are for swings that go in all directions (aka, tire swings), as long as they only hang 6-7 feet from the top beam. So we have room for a tire swing, and a ring/net swing (already in place on the right). We will leave one side open, so the remaining five will be filled with other swings of various kinds. Probably a few bench swings, a few hammocks. Maybe we'll outfit one as a picnic table (that probably won't swing... probably). We intend to have multiple fasteners in each space (eventually) so we can reconfigure it as needed. So all hammocks for sleeping outside in the summer, or all picnic tables for a party, for instance. Would be interesting to make a double bench swing that faces each other with a table in the middle, but I'm guessing that would be strange.
The large bays use two 6x6 (140mm square cross section) treated posts each, with 4x6 posts for the remaining four posts, and all the posts go 4 feet (1.2m) in the ground with a suitable amount of concrete below and around the bottom of the post. The posts are notched so the headers rest on top of the notches and bolt into the posts. We will be adding some additional beams across top so the posts share side loads better, and the posts and a few other bits need more wood stain so it all matches the header color.
Eventually we'd like to put some sort of roof over it, but that's going to have to wait, at least until we can afford to fill it with swings. We will almost certainly have a fire pit in the middle.
We did run into one electrical wire during digging, but we're fairly certain it's an unused wire for a pool the previous owners had (only 12awg) , and I believe I've already located its termination inside the house (which was cut in a crawlspace) so I wired up an outlet on one of the posts, and if I'm correct then eventually I'll connect the cut wire in the house and have electricity out there.
Here's the area the morning after digging the holes. We rented a little stand-on mini skid steer with a 16" (40cm) diameter auger on it. By the time I got to the eighth hole I was able to do it in under 15 minutes. They have to be deeper than 4 feet (1.2m) to avoid the effects of frost heaving. Here in southern Michigan it's possible for the ground to freeze up to 42" deep, and if there's water under a structure, the freezing water may push structures out of the ground. So while I wanted deep holes to provide good support anyway, they needed to be this deep so none of the posts would be pushed out of the ground slowly over several winters.
Below you'll see the water that collected in them overnight (mostly groundwater), and consistency of the soil (all clay), and the cut wire almost in the middle of the hole.
That day we put 1 bag of concrete in the bottom of each hole, creating thick pads for the posts to rest on, preventing them from snicking into the ground. The following day we put the posts in, spaced them apart, plumbed them straight, poured another bag's worth of concrete in the bottom to hold each post down (the posts had screws in the bottom to embed them firmly into the concrete), and then fill the remainder of the holes with dirt.
We built a support structure around the middle to keep everything in place when we were pouring concrete, and left it there so we could stand on it while preparing the tops of the posts to receive the headers.
I didn't think through how I was going to notch the posts and connect the headers, so I spent nearly half a day working it out, and when we were planning the location of the set it took us over half a day to figure out where it was going to be and how it was going to be oriented. Reached a stalemate, in fact, until I realized we could take down a pine tree, then suddenly everything fell into place. This was supposed to be a 3 day project, but we finished it up this morning after about 5 days of work.
Learned a lot, would do a few things differently if I had to do it over. Still lots of little things to do - attach the swings, level and grass the area, put in a fire pit, etc, etc, etc. But the major portions are done and the rest can be done in little 1-2 hour projects here and there.
Lots of fun, but glad it's done![DOUBLEPOST=1494876210,1494875986][/DOUBLEPOST]Oh, and for those wondering, frost heaving is why basements are more common up north than in the south. If you have to dig a foundation 4 feet down to avoid frost heave, you might as well dig another 4 feet and have a basement. The cost isn't that much more.