Decking Ideas for a Balcony? Hi, I have a concrete veranda base to be exact 220 x...

Hi,

I have a concrete veranda base to be exact 220 x 150cm (7 by 5 feet approx) and I would resembling to cover it with some deck. To be honest I really dislike decking tiles - I cogitate they look tacky. Instead, I approaching to buy some timber and lay down a better looking decking. I've done some reading on the web and I think I'm right contained by saying that I call for pressure treated 5/4" x 6" for the actually deck itself. But I'm not sure how I should build a timber frame on top of which the deck will be screwed to. What timer would you suggest for this? Also, I'm concerned about marine being trapped by this frame. Of course, I need the decking to be one piece when it is finished so that I can store it during the winter.

How might I finish the deck - varnish etc?

Thanks for your help,

Barry.
Answers:    answer one is virtuous. it is going to be awful cumbersome to try to store each winter. use pressure treated wood underneath fastened to the concrete and run the boards contained by the direction of the slope. that way the sea can still drain. the excess water will not bother the pressure treated wood. consequently cover the sleepers with trex deck or resembling product leaving plenty room, a 16 penny nail size, for dampen and snow to drain off underneath.
My counsel is to use one of the new artificial wood deck material. Buy the best one you can afford. They do cost considerably more than p/s wood, but contemplate no refinishing, no rotting, no checking, etc. Then I would permanently attach it to the veranda. Lay "stringers" across the balcony so that hose down runs between them to the edge. You can deliberate construction adhesive, powder activate concrete nails or concrete anchors. Your hardware store as heaps types. They all require drilling a hole surrounded by the concrete. Rent a genuine concrete drill, don't try to do it near your regular drill you will wear yourself out. Then lay the decking across the sleepers, fastening them per the manufacturer's instructions.