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JAPANESE TEA-HOUSE : HOW TO BUILD ONE 

SeanRegan
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I built this in 1987, it wasn't that difficult. We wanted a summerhouse, but I didn't like the conventional ones available at that time. So I decided to build this to compliment our 5ft deep koi pool.
It's based on a collection of old photographs of Victorian versions of Japanese garden features I found in books in Manchester Central Library.
Japanese craftsmen were brought over in the 1800s to build these features in the gardens of the houses of wealthy people.
Although for this one I've added a few touches of my own.
The design will suit small gardens, as the overall dimensions are 9' X 6' for the room, 9' X 3' for the veranda and 12' X 12' for the roof. The only tools employed were hand tools, plus an electric saw, planer and drill.
It has an electrical supply via an armoured cable buried in a side border.
The centre door is secured by four bolts at each corner allowing it to be opened inwards or outwarsds either way, or removed completely. The side doors fold back on themselves, so when required the whole building can be opened up.
The floor of the veranda has hardwood tiles on top of roofing plywood and the interior has a vinyl floor covering.
The design of the roof has the effect of working like a "reverse sail" so strong winds have never been a problem, despite the big overhang at the front.
When I re-covered the roof two years ago, I used a non-tear fabric, expensive, but worth it.
The 3" X 2" and 4" X 2" softwood was purchased "rough sawn" as it was less expensive that way (after all it's just a "glorified shed") and I planed and sanded it down.
All I've had to do as far as other maintenance work is apply extra coats of Dulux Woodsheen every few years. This is expensive, nearly fifty quid for 2.5ltrs,, but forms an impervious coating over the wood and thus gives long-lasting protection.
It's home to my two vinyl jukeboxes, a TV, and a small Budweiser fridge on a table on castors, so it can be rolled out onto the veranda. Later I added a small freezer on top of the fridge, for the times when my wife orders food in bulk.
There you go.
• ROCK-OLA 443 : DINAH W...
The 4' plus lamps and the 6' pagoda seen in the photos and this video, I built from concrete in molds I made for them. The pagoda needed seventeen different molds.
This is another video showing their construction, if you've ever made sandcastles for your kids, they are a doddle.
• JAPANESE LANTERNS : HO...
The lamps were each cast during one evening and finished and assembled through the following day. The pagoda took a couple of hours a night, over the course of two weeks and then assembled on site on top of two 3' X 2' paving slabs..
The lamps are lit by recycled 12volt pool lamps, supplied by a transformer in the roof of the tea-house. These and more than a dozen lamps, plus two sets of fairy lights, in the garden are controlled by four switches behind the curtains in the lounge, via an armoured cable which runs from the house under the concrete raft below the crazy York stone patio, to the garage, where they are connected to four dedicated sockets.
We like to think everything in the garden is complimentary, it's a bit deceptive as it's no more than 85ft from the house to the back fence. Here's a tour, thanks for looking.
• GARDEN TOUR : JUNE 2013
Edit, I removed the wisteria from around the eaves in 2014 as it was getting too heavy.
Early in 2019, the pool developed a serious leak. To replace the liner would have meant removing all the perimeter rocks, part of the waterfall and the imitation bridge over the filter return, so we decided to have it filled in and paved over. The fish went to a good home (two doors away to another koi enthusiast).
• GARDEN TOUR : MAY 2019
Thanks everyone, for the many kind words.

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26 авг 2012

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Комментарии : 51   
@pang-ngiavang1956
@pang-ngiavang1956 29 дней назад
Nicely done!!!!
@eduardochavacano
@eduardochavacano 10 месяцев назад
This is so beautiful. Not sure if the roof is going to be easy to replicate. But definitely a great video.
@RayWhiteMMA
@RayWhiteMMA 11 лет назад
Thank you so much for taking the time to not only photograph your project, but making the slide show and explanations! I have always wanted to make a tea house, and you showed a very simple and beautiful expression of that!
@hunglu2776
@hunglu2776 9 лет назад
interesting way of presenting. it's like learning in silent
@Handygoddess
@Handygoddess 9 лет назад
I think you're exceptional, I enjoy what's being done here
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 9 лет назад
The Handy Goddess Thanks for your kind words
@Thumtwiddler
@Thumtwiddler 11 лет назад
brilliant! If I ever get a garden I'm definitely doing it Oriental style as well and following your instructions I might even be able to build a beautiful teahouse like yours!
@Stolat79
@Stolat79 4 года назад
Beautiful
@toastweek3745
@toastweek3745 8 лет назад
Absolutely gorgeous
@nicomap
@nicomap 7 лет назад
Fantastic. Got a space for a slightly smaller version of a Tea House so hope this will perhaps inspire me to have a go at building one.
@cdmarkandu
@cdmarkandu 10 лет назад
Absolutely brilliant! Love it!
@acechadwick
@acechadwick 5 лет назад
This is absolutely beautiful. I'm really impressed. I came on here looking for a design and this is it!
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 5 лет назад
Thanks for your kind words. Things have changed a bit this year, as I've had my koi pool filled in as it developed a serious leak after 32 years. (The koi went to a good home two doors away). I had it paved over and we now have roses in ceramic pots on it. We still have the sound of water from a Marenelli fountain. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-LHGezB_Kmqo.html The tea-house is still in perfect condition. I've swopped the little 14" TV I had in there you can just see in this photo (top left).. ibb.co/7rCPXQv For this one, as we've had an "upgrade" in our front room. I watched some of the Wimbledon tennis in there with both the doors open. ibb.co/VJmSBnj Seemed a shame to watch it indoors when the weather's nice.
@acechadwick
@acechadwick 5 лет назад
@@SeanRegan01 I'm all fired up now! I have a Japanese garden and grow Japanese Maples, but it's only small and I'm becoming overrun with my obsessive 'Just one more' buying of them so..my idea is to get a small allotment and do the absolute works on it and let my imagination run wild and chill surrounded by nature and Shirasawanums ;)
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 5 лет назад
@@acechadwick Sounds like a plan! Good luck!
@Arijahankhkhalid
@Arijahankhkhalid 8 лет назад
absolutely beautiful!
@JuanMiro507
@JuanMiro507 7 лет назад
hey! that looks nice. I'm thinking of buying a land and building a retreat center with small balinese tea houses... i wanted to do it by myself, since everybody i look for wants to charge you a lott!!!! so thiss is great inspiration.
@badbadger6766
@badbadger6766 7 лет назад
beautiful. thankyou for sharing x
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 11 лет назад
Thank you for your kind words, the building has given my wife and I a lot of pleasure for more than two decades. It's somewhere where we can enjoy the sight and sounds in our garden, sheltered from the sun on the occasional hot days we get in this country!
@TheHighPandaBear
@TheHighPandaBear 8 лет назад
nice work
@suhteefpuchai8098
@suhteefpuchai8098 11 лет назад
I want to build one!
@dapsapsrp
@dapsapsrp 8 лет назад
I want to build a tea house for my wife sometime soon, perhaps next spring as I am building a utility shed now. My wife is half Japanese and seems to like this type of style as do I. Do you live in the UK by chance? I live in the midwestern US where the weather can get quite harsh both summer and winter. Our high and low temps can differ by over 100 degrees any given year and I'd be worried that traditional build style would not be robust enough. Humidity is high almost year round also so we really need to use chemically treated wood for anything close to the ground such as floor frames, piers, etc.
@wilcarhen
@wilcarhen 9 лет назад
Very nice. Can you give more details on the opaque plastic used for the windows?
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 9 лет назад
Thanks for your interest. Can't tell you a lot. They were originally discarded drop-in panels in a suspended ceiling with fluorescent lights above, after a re-fit in a retail store (I was in retail), I "recycled them." I had to trim them to fit lengthways. I dared only cut one side of each panel in case they split, as I only had two spares, but I was able to use the spares for the side windows. Hence the bottom panel on each door is only nine inches high, so I used plywood for that as I knew it would only get dirty. The doors are ready-planed 2" X 1". I got the wood yard to cut a groove in the centre of one side of all of the 1" faces and in both sides of the middle two horizontal pieces. The doors were really easy to assemble and the plastic sheets add to their rigidity. The three "windows" in each of the nine panels were formed by applying two strips of hardwood beading. Same for the side windows, it's just one sheet of plastic, with applied strips of beading. I hope that helps, you could try some shopfitting firms, they always have a lot of such unwanted stuff if they change a ceiling..
@wilcarhen
@wilcarhen 9 лет назад
Thanks for the info. Very helpful.
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 10 лет назад
It was a long time ago. The cost of timber has escalated dramatically since then.
@normalundberg6848
@normalundberg6848 8 лет назад
simple, elegant, and inviting: my only questions: (1) what latitude/climate was it built in? e.g. what kind of winter weather? wind & rain resistance? and (2) related somewhat to (1) -- it looks like the structure is raised slightly above ground - any problems with critters moving in down below? I think mostly of skunks . . .. Instead of the plastic, I think I'd use sheets of washi (Japanese paper) coated (stiffened) with konyaku -- might be easier for me to find & do, also would have a similar effect re the soft light coming through. Many thanks for this informative, straightforward and inspiring video. I don't have a jukebox -- but do have the music on my ipad, and could practice my shakuhachi out there, as well as set up a hibachi to boil water for tea. Oh yes.
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 8 лет назад
+Norma Lundberg Thanks for your interest. We live in North Cheshire, England, we have quite a mild climate but it can go down to -10C on occasions in the winter. Heres a photo shortly after I built it, taken in February. We can in some years get a lot more snow than that. i1120.photobucket.com/albums/l487/CarmenSternwood/Odds%20and%20Ends/11_30_0_zpsvubhnfdy.jpeg Its only softwood and roofing ply but regular coats every few years of Dulux Woodsheen has kept the rot at bay. I replaced the roofing felt five years ago with a non-tear variety. The building is now nearly thirty years old and still looks as good as it did when I built it. Strong winds dont affect it, despite the big overhang at the front. The shape of the roof acts like a reverse sail and the wind presses down on it rather than lifts it up. The only animals we get in our garden is the odd cat, squirrel and occasionally a fox. There's a six inch gap underneath the base you can see is just a "skirt" that doesnt reach down to the ground. Theres no skirt at the back so I can see whats going on under it if I need to.
@normalundberg6848
@normalundberg6848 8 лет назад
+TheDoghouseRiley Many thanks for the added information and for the photo of the teahouse in winter. The covering of snow makes it seem even more beautiful and would make it a fine spot for seeing the garden under the spell of winter. I'm going to start planning for next spring, and will let you know how the washi windows work out. The underground space might not be a problem for creatures like skunks, as it is entirely open, and skunks like a more private enclosed space. Your instructions are so elegantly simple, but also your garden setting suits it perfectly. A truly worthwhile project and not overwhelming to create.
@boratstuntdouble
@boratstuntdouble 8 лет назад
All i can say is wow! Im going to be working on a similar project soon for my garden. Hope mine turns out as good as yours. Can i ask, what type of ply did you use for the roof? Was it exterior ply? And was it 9mm or 18mm ply because im thinking that you may not get the "bend" for the turned up look with 18mm ply.
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 8 лет назад
+boratstuntdouble Just seen your post. It's 9mm exterior grade roofing ply. Even that took some bending. It's substantial enough. Even with the few perlins I used, the roof easily takes my weight, if I stand on it as I did this summer to re-paint the box lid and I weigh twelve and a half stone. When we replaced the felt a few years ago, it took the weight of two people.
@generalpaciani12
@generalpaciani12 9 лет назад
Omg I want to build one of these!!! Do you have any plans?
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 9 лет назад
Plans? I did it off the top of my head. I've put a lot of information in the video. The width of the roof at 16ft was determined by the length of wood available at the time from a local wood yard. The height to the eaves I decided at 6ft. as I wanted to get a "balance" and also as with the roof on top of that, I didn't want it so high it'd annoy the neighbours. I decided the building could only be 9ft square including the veranda, because any larger, with the overhang of the roof, it would encroach too much into the garden. As it is the eaves are only a couple of inches short of the building line at the back and on the right-hand side. It's all about the aesthetics, I wanted it to look good when viewed over my koi pool near the house. 'cos really, it's just a garden shed. But store-bought ones I think look ugly and don't last. This is now 28 years old. I pretty much made it up as I went along, having got a picture in my head of what I wanted. If you have a go at making one you don't have to have all the measurements the same as mine. Mine were determined a bit by the location. If you run into problems let me know.
@generalpaciani12
@generalpaciani12 9 лет назад
Wow thanks ill have to give it a try!!
@Veterankoi
@Veterankoi 3 года назад
hi in the dog house. Let me know about all the paint colours you use. When did you finish painting it. It looks great!
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 3 года назад
Thanks for the kind words. The paint on it from bare wood, was Dulux Mahogany Woodsheen. It gets another coat every three to five years. The paint forms a polymer seal, ideal for outdoor softwood constructions. The only way water can get in is if it gets damaged. The name of the paint stayed the same for couple of decades or more. The formula for this stuff has changed a few times, the latest "incarnation" is called Dulux Trade Ultimate Woodstain, which is "guaranteed 10 years." It's over £50 for 2.5ltrs. But I think it is worth it. I did change the roofing felt ten years ago, using a quality non-tear polymer felt. It's now 33 years old and all still in perfect condition, I took this photo in June of this year. It houses my two vinyl jukeboxes, which provide "gardening music" for me (and anyone in a 100 yd radius if I turned up the volumes, which I don't...often). ibb.co/QmGzssX
@Veterankoi
@Veterankoi 3 года назад
@@SeanRegan01 Thanks for the reply. I started a Japanese tea house build earlier this year. I used various mahogany stains, but found that that deluxe woodsheen rich mahogany looked better than the rest. Your comments in the paint give me great confidence in the choice and longevity.
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 3 года назад
@@Veterankoi The first coat of Woodsheen goes nowhere, as it's partly absorbed by the wood. Subsequent coats go much further. It also then dries quite quickly so that in warm weather, you can give it another coat within a few hours.
@rodneykemp1009
@rodneykemp1009 Год назад
Can you tell me what you used to cover the roof panels? Is it some type of flooring linoleum ?
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 Год назад
Thanks for the interest. I've been asked that question before, from someone in America. It's a polymer roofing "felt" as it is called in the UK. The surface is coated with sand. This makes it fire resistant. It is mostly used on flat roof house extensions.
@rodneykemp1009
@rodneykemp1009 Год назад
@@SeanRegan01 thankyou. Your garden and tea house have really inspired me to start doing something.
@TechFests
@TechFests 9 лет назад
My mother wants one of these built, but dont think I have the skill - do you know of any companies that have these type of things pre-made.
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 9 лет назад
Hi Mark. Any competent joiner could build you one by just looking at this video. You'd also be able have it built to your own specifications. It'd be cheaper than getting a specialised company to supply one "off the peg." Of those I've no knowledge, as everything in our garden I built myself. There's nothing beyond the ability of the average DIY person and no tools are required other than those available to most amateur DIYers. My skills, whatever they are, I picked up by "necessity," doing jobs round the house when I was younger and less well off. I didn't have any training, my occupations have always been in "non-hands on" management.
@davidstanek1227
@davidstanek1227 4 года назад
I'd like to understand the framing of the roof better please.
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 4 года назад
I can't add much to what I've already put in the video. Each corner post has a small strengthening plywood triangle on top connecting it to the sides. Two "3 X2" beams connect the two sides. One of which is along the top of the doors. Two further beams go front to back. Then I made a strengthened box frame to sit in the middle. Three perlins are connected to each corner. The corner ones pass under the barge boards, whereas the rest butt up to them. This gives the roof an upwards curve at each corner. You'll see that in the video. There's a void in the ceiling in the middle which gives access to the roof. The cover just sits on the top like a box lid. I can raise one side to provide more ventilation in the summer. The sides of the "box" are panelled in with an access door to the "loft." The ceiling is formed from off-cuts of roofing ply.
@StuartLoria
@StuartLoria 10 лет назад
Budget?
@tryhitmecs9699
@tryhitmecs9699 8 лет назад
now try it with no nails or glue :P
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 8 лет назад
+Tryhitme cs Mine is just supposed to look as if it has been made without nails or glue. Hence the imitation dowel pegs. It is not supposed to be authentic,it is just a variation on a Victorian idea of what a tea-house should look like. It suits its purpose, that is all I need.
@tryhitmecs9699
@tryhitmecs9699 8 лет назад
+TheDoghouseRiley yeah, i was joking dude, it's beautiful :) well done
@SeanRegan01
@SeanRegan01 8 лет назад
+Tryhitme cs Thanks for that. It will be 29 years old this year and still in perfect condition.
@StefanBacon
@StefanBacon 9 лет назад
Ick, pretty cool result, but fake dowel joints? Call me a bigot but ick. If you're going to do it, do it for real! Seriously though it's beautiful and you should feel beautiful.
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