New window seat with a storage base for Melen.
Corner to corner is 8' wide. Depth is 26". The center section will have a lift up lid that is 48" wide by 21" deep. The lid will be 3/4" plywood so it will take the weight of someone sitting on it.
Our daughter Melen had a big round lounge chair in the corner of her living room, I loved it, but her Corgi dog didn't like it because it would spin when he jumped up onto the chair. So she asked for a window seat to be built.
Went up there last week, took some measurements. Pre-built some sections at home. Loaded them up and hauled them to her.
Did a double 2x4 wall to fit under the window. Can't nail into the wall under the window to secure it because it is an insulated prefab metal sandwich wall that is actually fairly thin. It is a high rise condominium building, not really sure how thick that panel is, but I suspect it is under 2" thick and just guessing on the material, I know the external cladding is metal, interior cladding is metal, and it is insulated.
It is a project in process. Won't get back up there until next week to put the top pieces on it. Maybe sooner? No clue.
Oh, and for haters, yes that is a Ryobi framing nailer. The brand of amateurs. I'm OK with that. It works great for me.
Corner to corner is 8' wide. Depth is 26". The center section will have a lift up lid that is 48" wide by 21" deep. The lid will be 3/4" plywood so it will take the weight of someone sitting on it.
Our daughter Melen had a big round lounge chair in the corner of her living room, I loved it, but her Corgi dog didn't like it because it would spin when he jumped up onto the chair. So she asked for a window seat to be built.
Went up there last week, took some measurements. Pre-built some sections at home. Loaded them up and hauled them to her.
Did a double 2x4 wall to fit under the window. Can't nail into the wall under the window to secure it because it is an insulated prefab metal sandwich wall that is actually fairly thin. It is a high rise condominium building, not really sure how thick that panel is, but I suspect it is under 2" thick and just guessing on the material, I know the external cladding is metal, interior cladding is metal, and it is insulated.
It is a project in process. Won't get back up there until next week to put the top pieces on it. Maybe sooner? No clue.
Oh, and for haters, yes that is a Ryobi framing nailer. The brand of amateurs. I'm OK with that. It works great for me.
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