Anda di halaman 1dari 40

How to Build

a Raised Bed Garden

A collaborative effort to enable people to create an


easier way to grow their own food and flowers.
Claude Lewenz & friends

This is a work in progress.


Pages 24 to 38 are still blank.
Please contribute your knowledge.

First Edition 31 December 2008
Author & Photographs by Claude Lewenz
Copyright © 2009 Claude Lewenz – All rights reserved
Jackson House Publishing Company
ISBN 144141805-9 (Print only)
EAN-13 978-144141805-0 (Print only)


Raised Beds - The story

In 2008, we were invited to a raised bed workshop on Waiheke Island, New Zealand run by Northland’s Grant Steven in
which he brought along a set of pre-cut and hinged timber moulds. The workshop was to make a raised bed by clearing the
ground, setting the moulds up, mixing a concrete-like aggregate and then pouring this into the moulds. The moulds were
then removed, put on the other end and the process is repeated. Once the aggregate had set, it was smoothed off and then
finished. Simple enough for several dozen people over a weekend, and the host got a raised bed to plant and feed his family.

Our garden presented a slightly different challenge... it is bigger and we did not have a dozen volunteers to do the work; we
would have to pay for labour, which means designing the process to keep the hours down. We needed 13 beds, not one.
Having designed and built five buildings using the same aggregate - called earthbrick on Waiheke Island, New Zealand, I
began work at my desk using a CAD program, rather than in the garden. We needed a variable length form that could be
placed on the ground in a minute, with little set up, and then filled to pour the whole bed. Also, we wanted the forms to be
durable, so they could be reused by the community thousands of times. Therefore, the moulds needed to be:

• A complete, pre-shaped form that is set on the ground and the whole bed is poured in one step
• The bed-walls must be variable length, so short, medium and long beds can be poured
• The lifting points should be easily managed by two people
• The complex angles be made of steel (or aluminium if you have access to affordable welding services)

While this seems like a fairly simple matter to make, pour and begin using, it turns out to have all sorts of little details if
one wants to get it right. In this short manual, such details are set out.

Perhaps the most important detail is the specifications sheet for the steel moulds. At the back pages of the book, you
take a photocopy to your local welding or engineering company and ask for a quote. It includes the shapes of the steel and
the welding notes. It should be sufficient for a shop to give you a quote. If you then want to get fancy, take the moulds to a
nearby auto paint shop and ask for a quote to degrease the welded moulds and spray them with durable protective paint...
of whatever colour car they happened to paint last... white is good, it demonstrates to the next person who borrows the
moulds what a good cleaning job should look like on return.

The ideal earth surface is flat, but because the aggregate flows, it will fill underneath and make up some irregularities
in the soil... although this also requires more material. There are details to remember, like have a water pipe plan in advance
(you do need to water the garden and forever dragging hoses around seems a bit un-smart after all the smart work of
making a raised bed garden). This means remembering to put the access pipes on the ground below the mould before
pouring and have pipes come high enough out inside the bed to connect irrigation later. If you are doing a full garden
(rather than modifying an old one), you might also want to bury electrical cables so you can set up your electric chipper,
hedge trimmer for the lavender or other appliances with a simple plug-in. More details: When poured, but still wet, you
press in plastic pipes (rigid bits of water pipe or electrical conduit will do fine) to enable bent rods to be set up over which
netting or windcloth will be laid. After the aggregate hardens, you need to coat it, both so it looks beautiful and to make
it distinctly difficult for snails to climb up and get into the plants. And finally, once built, there are all sorts of details about
drip irrigation, companion and isolation planting.

So, dear reader and gardener... enjoy reading, making and eating the fruits of your labour.


The difference between the
Northland hinged mould and
the Waiheke welded mould can
be seen in these photographs.
The Waiheke mould is set on
the ground in a single unit where
the complex angles are fixed,
thus requiring no set up time.
The welded units are bulkier to
transport (fit in the back of an
SUV) but much faster to set up
and to remove when poured. In
addition to the steel, note the
wooden board that joins the
ends. In the photo below right,
four of these 300 x 50 mm (2x12)
boards form the variable length
side walls

Let us begin by honouring the work of Grant Steven and Jonah Aslund of Northland, New Zealand who
introduced this particular type of raised bed system to Waiheke Island, hosted by Transition Towns - NZ’s James
Samuel. Of particular note is the aesthetic aspect of their design. Walls could be boring, even ugly, straight boxes and
accomplish the same thing, but the gentle angle of the walls, the 45° corners and the orange-brown tint introduce an
atheistic intended to make the garden beautiful as well as practical.
The difference between the Aslund/Steven system and the Waiheke method is one of detail.
The Aslund/Steven moulds are made of timber using hinges. Only one end is built with an end-shutter (as in the
photograph above left) and the mould is then disassembled and reversed to finish the bed.
Waiheke steel moulds are made of welded steel on the ends, with variable length 300 x 50 (2x12) wooden
sideboards. It is designed to set the whole mould for the bed on the ground at one time, and then to fill it with
aggregate. When filled, the side timbers lift off first, then each end mould is lifted off. In this way, the set up time is
significantly reduced with an experienced team of two builders setting, pouring and lifting one set of mould in under
one hour.

Note that
in the steel
mould at first
a rope lift was
tried, later this
was discarded
and steel lifting
handles were
welded on.


How to Build a
Raised Bed Garden
In Italy in 1989 the Slow Food movement was born out of a realisation that our machine age was taking away the
timeless experience of food, of eating and drinking, giving us food not as life, but as fuel. To join the slow food movement
(www.slowfood.com) a local community creates a convivium. They explain “We call our chapters convivia because it is
through these local groups that our philosophy of conviviality is best expressed. Through our convivia, our members come
together to share the everyday joys food has to offer. Slow Food is founded first and foremost on our right to pleasure and
our consequent responsibility to protect our heritage of food, traditions and cultures that go along with it.” To become a
real slow food convivium, a community needs to grow its own food. However, food gardening faces some challenges:

• Weeds and blowing weed seeds • Burning summer sun


• Wind and storms • Insufficient summer rain
• Birds and rabbits eating plants and digging up soil • Poor soil and thin topsoil
• Insects and snails attacking the plants • Aching backs from weeding

To address these challenges, one solution is to shift to solid-wall raised bed gardening. Yes, it requires an initial capital
cost to put the beds in, but once done, gardening becomes a whole lot more about raising food and a lot less about battling
nature and the elements.


Why raised beds?
• Weeds: Instead of weedy ground, you have the opportunity to start out with weed free soil. The bed has rods or hoops
over which you drape various types of agricultural cloth that keep blowing seeds out. If you use a light soil it is easy to
weed. Weeds that would come through the walls cannot penetrate the solid wall that has no openings.
• Wind and sun: The hoops can be draped with wind cloth to protect from wind damage and shade cloth for burning
sun
• Warmer earth: Sunlight strikes the walls and warms them. They hold and release the warmth, creating a micro-
climate. It’s the equivalent of being a few hundred miles further north.
• Birds: The hoops can be draped with bird cloth to keep out birds, rabbits, hedgehogs, etc. It works brilliantly.
• Insects and snails: The surface of the walls have no openings (unlike railway sleepers or timber) which prevents
insects from finding a way to crawl through. The vertical walls prove to be difficult for snails in part because of the sand
& clay bagging on the wall surface.
• Water: The system uses a drip feed watering system, under the mulch, so little water is lost to evaporation or wind
• Poor soil: Because the full bed is for growing, and it needs filling (about 250 mm - 300 mm), a good soil mix can be
put in. Underneath it is open so worms will soon find it. The beds can be custom layered with various types of soil, and
drained if bogging is a problem, since the bed bottom is at ground level.
• Aching Backs: The bed sits about 300 mm above the ground, a comfortable height to sit and tend the garden. The
bed width is intended to enable a normal person to reach slightly more than halfway in with comfort.
Why not just use ponga logs or sleepers?
They rot and bugs & weeds crawl through the cracks. They can be more expensive to buy, but over time certainly are
more expensive because of their shorter service life. The beauty of the crushed rock aggregate design is that it remains
beautiful, solid and is more functional.
Why not just make boxed concrete walls?
You can, and for the most part performance will be the same - they will be ugly, however. Some aspects of the design
are practical - the 45 degree angles make it easier to use wheelbarrows without clipping the corners. The gentle angle of the
sidewalls uses less aggregate since it has a wider base but less above. However, beyond the practical, these design elements
are specifically intended to make the beds beautiful, because life needs beauty and a beautiful garden is worthwhile. It’s not
just about eating the food, it’s about taking an early evening walk and enjoying its beauty.
What will it cost?
It depends on whether you are a do-it-yourself gardener or you lack the time, skills or strength and have the money to
pay to get the hard parts built for you. Likewise, if you want to pay professionals to take your “as is” yard and convert it to
fully finished raised beds, it will cost more than if you are running a charity project for the retirement village where you will
seek volunteer labour, donated aggregate (called Gap-40 on Waiheke Island), cement and sand, D10 rods (rebar) and all
the soil and mulch. This manual lists what you need, estimated costs and suggestions on keeping costs down.
So how do we begin?
The first question has to do with the moulds. Are they available, or do they need to be made? If they need to be made,
we have created a set of designs that are intended to be given to several engineering shops in your area to request quotes.
The moulds are made, for the most part from flat, common steel, 3 mm thick. They are cut to precise size, then welded into
the mould shape.
We created one complete set of moulds, so one decides how long the bed will be, selects 300 x 50 timbers of the


appropriate length, and then the whole mould is laid on the ground. By whole mould, we mean that the whole bed is
poured at once. One sets the mould up, mixes the aggregate, pours it into the mould and a few minutes later lifts the
timbers and then the two mould ends and the bed is done. Of course it then needs to sit for a few days to harden and cure
before it is plastered. 1200 wide is just right for this gardener

In summary the steps are as follows:


• Secure the moulds (make them or borrow, rent or buy a set
already made).
• Decide how long and wide the beds will be. Here, we enter
the first area of debate, so we set out your choices below.
• Build reinforced beds over water pipe, insert hoop pipe-rod-
holders, allow to cure then plaster the visible walls and top.
• Add soil mix, drip irrigation pipes, protective hoops, water
pipes to drip irrigation, cover walkways with chip, stone or
grass, begin planting.

The Width Debate


Many of the books say to keep the width to three or four feet
(about 900 to 1200 mm). Some prefer a wider bed, closer to 1400
mm or even 1500 mm – noting that the extra width provides
more growing space for little extra cost – which is true. However,
if the primary gardener has short arms and legs, it makes some
sense to design ergonomically, and the set of moulds we made were set at 1200 mm width because they were designed for
a woman’s reach (as tested). Also at 1200 wide, one six metre rod will make two squared reinforcing hoops. As a concession
to big-width advocates, however, the mould design specifications for future moulds was modified so the middle steel
panels are now split into two, allowing a user to unbolt them and insert a “stretcher” block of 100, 200 or even 300 mm. This
enables the mould to be 1300, 1400 or 1500 mm wide, respectively. This does change the symmetry however.

The Length Debate


With the Waiheke steel design, there is no limit to how long the beds can be, because length is determined by the
length of the side timbers. The realistic limit therefore is the timber yard limit of 6 meter 300 x 50 timbers giving an
effective length of 7.2 meter for the bed. One could go longer by joining long timbers, but this would require an additional
angled locking brace.
The debate on length is generally about cost vs function. The longer the mould, the less aggregate is used per square
meter of growing soil. However the books say if you make it too long, you will not walk around the raised bed, but
take a short cut through it, compacting the soil and spreading mud. Sure, one can put in walking stones, but this seems
a compromise. Also, at one point the length of the bed begins to look more industrial than romantic, and romance is
important in creating and loving a garden. Available land determines what you can build. If you are limited in land, you
must use shorter beds. If your land slopes and you can’t terrace the beds, the longer they are, the more likely the water
will run downhill in a heavy rain and pool at the lower end (in some cases where we had too great a slope, cut a piece of
spouting pipe and laid it under the mould to provide drainage). Also if you grow mint, blackberries, Jerusalem artichokes
or other plants that can take over a garden if not blocked, the smaller bed can be allocated solely for that plant to stop the
plants from spreading too far. For some of these plants you may want to consider the smallest side timbers so the bed is a
perfect octagon.


Notes on Sizing

The first set of Waiheke steel moulds (with a fixed width


of 1200 mm interior at top) have three sets of timbers:

• 4.2 m long bed using four 3 m long 300 x 50 timbers


(right)
• 3.0 m long bed using four 1.8 m long side timbers
(above right)
• Octagon using very short side timbers (above left)

4.2 m is the longest bed that will use


one 6 m longitudinal hoop for draping
shade or bird cloth. Also, this uses four
3 metre boards. 4.2 is about the longest
mould one uses with one middle support
brace. If you go longer, say to 6 meters,
make up a second middle support brace
to prevent the side timbers from bulging
when they are first poured.
Photo of a middle support brace used to keep the timbers from bulging.

Design and Aesthetics


We suggest you measure your site and then use whiteboard
and erasable markers to create a scale model of the garden. For
a garden of about 20 m x 20 m, we found a scale of 1 meter = 1
inch (about 1:40) worked well. This is because most people have
access to a metric tape measure and an imperial ruler. We also
suggest you cut out of paper the three bed sizes (if you use the


4.2, 3.0 and octagon moulds) so you can easily move them around as you get creative.
Draw out what is fixed... trees, walls, hedges, etc. Then consider various geometric layouts, noting that some plants need
an east west line, whilst others may be happier with north-south orientation of the raised beds. The ends of the moulds
have a 45 degree angle, both for atheistic, and to reduce wheelbarrow damage when turning a corner. Work with the
possibilities.
When you have completed your on-paper design test it out on the land. Make sure you have allowed at least 1
meter between beds for wheelbarrows and walking. Also pay attention to drainage. You don’t want puddles. Make sure
everything actually fits and looks right on the ground. Put pegs in the ground to show where the eight 45º corners will go.
You can use the moulds, if you have them, to assure you get the placement right.

Prepare the Land


The beds do not need a foundation, but they do need good ground that will not subside later, or they may crack. Clear
the land of junk, of vegetation that will break down and other unstable debris. Tightly cut grass is apparently OK. Note
that in the costing, if you are paying workers by the hour or asking for a fixed quote, this is one of the biggest variables. If
you have flat land with all the topsoil stripped (and set aside), with a layer of Gap 40 compacted in the subsoil (note this
is an extreme example, not an expectation), where all the workers do is lay the moulds down and pour, the job will take
less than an hour per mould (and could be faster if we can figure out how to pour the wheelbarrow contents into the
mould instead of shovelling it out – we need some sort of funnel on the barrow or mould, we figure). However, if you are
retrofitting a current garden and want to save particular plants, and the workers have to spend hours in preparation, expect
costs to rise.

Tools Needed
1 set of steel moulds for both ends
(See the last two pages of this book for a cut-out request-for-quote form if you need to order a set made).
4 equal length 300 x 50 side timbers w handles (each set uses four side timbers)
1 cement mixer with power (electric or petrol)
1 bin / half barrel to hold open cement bag
(a 55 gallon steel barrel cut longitudinally works great because it is rounded)
Protective tarps or ground cover (if required)
2 shovels (one at mixer, one at beds)
2 wheel barrows (fill one / pour other)
1 bucket for water (hose nearby)
2 buckets for clay paint (raw & strained)
1 wind cloth filter to strain clay paint
1 hose or bucket/brush for cleaning tools
Tape measure to check work
1 hacksaw or bolt cutters to cut D10 rods
1 saw or hacksaw to cut plastic pipe
1 pliers to twist D10 ties (overlapped rods)
1 crowbar to break side timbers loose (lever)
2 pairs double-dipped fisherman’s rubber gloves
Appropriate safety equipment


Shopping Checklist
☐ $___ Steel Moulds (both ends) See spec sheet
☐ $___ Wooden 300x50 (2x12) side moulds (four per set) Length is variable
☐ $___ Steel side brace for longer moulds (holds timber) Prevents lateral bulging of the timber mould
☐ $___ Cement Mixer, shovels, wheel barrow, gloves Use normal safety precautions
☐ $___ Optional reinforcing steel for the beds This prevents long term cracking
☐ $___ Aggregate (on Waiheke called Gap 40) Get local advice on best mix
☐ $___ Bags of cement

☐ $___ Sand for “bagging” the finished surface

☐ $___ Local clay (should be free from the earth)

☐ $___ 300 mm rigid plastic pipe (about 13 mm OK) for rods Look for surplus or used pipe

☐ $___ D12 or 12 mm steel rods for hoops

☐ $___ 13 mm light gauge flexible black pipe to cover hoops Make sure it slides easy over the pipe

☐ $___ Irrigation pipe that goes under garden & moulds This is your underground water plan
☐ $___ Irrigation shut-off valve With drip feed, one valve is sufficient
☐ $___ Tee connectors to join all irrigation pipes Branch out into each bed
☐ $___ End connector to terminate pipes

☐ $___ Drip feed water pipes & tap-in fittings

☐ $___ Bird netting to cover beds as needed Allow 3-4 m. to drape over sides and ends
☐ $___ Wind cloth to cover beds as needed Allow 3-4 m. to drape over sides and ends
☐ $___ Shade cloth to cover beds as needed Allow 3-4 m. to drape over sides and ends
☐ $___ Good topsoil

☐ $___ Weedcloth or large cardboard (from appliance store) Covers the soil to prevent in-ground weeds

☐ $___ Wood chips or other ground cover for footpaths

☐ $___ Plants and seeds

☐ $___ Make sure you have an adequate water supply

Calculating the materials depends on how many beds you make, how level the surface and how long the beds are. a
cross-section of the bed is about 0.05 M2 which means if you multiply the 3rd dimension of the bed (it’s circumference)
you should get an “exact” material total. Problem is “exact” rarely works in the real world. Order extra. See lines E through J
on the next page for the calculation (note: it is easier to key these specs into a spread-sheet). Note that we put in 40% extra
for the irregular ground and it worked out right when we actually did the job.
What materials depends on what is available. On Waiheke Island, the aggregate is sometimes to “bony” meaning it lacks
enough small fines (stone dust or clay), so they add about 1/4 scrapings - the surface aggregate that has more clay in it.

10
quote Materials Work Sheet one 4.2 bed, fill in for yours Calc 4.2 m bed m bed
A Total number of beds of each size Fill in 1 beds _____ beds
B Length of side timber Fill in 3 m _____ m
C Total Length of both end moulds (fixed 1.85 m x 2) Fixed 3.7 m 3.7 m
D Length of each side timber x 2 (B x 2) Calc 6 m m
E Total circumference of mould (add C plus D) Calc 9.7 m m
F Cross section of each mould (fixed 0.054 m²) Fixed 0.05 m² 0.05 m²
G Total M³ of mould (E x F) Calc 0.52 m³ m³
H Allow additional mix for irregularities 40% Fill in 0.21 m³ m³
I Total mix for each bed (Gap 40 w “fines” **) (G+H) Calc 0.73 m³ m³
J Total mix for beds of one sizen (A x I) Calc 0.73 m³ m³
K $___ Total mix for all beds to buy 1 m³
L Cement at 13:1 ratio with mix (Gap 40) (J / 13) 0.08 m³ 0.06 m³ m³
M Cement bags (25 bags = 1 m³) for aggregate 1.92 bags
N 6 m Lengths of D10 rebar steel rods - each bed Calc 2
O Total steel for beds of one size (A x N) Calc 2 rods
P $___ Total D10 rebar steel to buy 2 bars
Q 290 mm 13+mm rigid water pipe/conduit (1/m. x E) Calc 10 pipes pipes
R Total pipes per beds of one size (A x Q / 290 mm) Calc 3 m m
Rigid plastic pipe can be scrap
S $___ Total plastic pipe to cut in 300 lengths 3 m or recycled
T Surface area for each bed’s plaster (E x 540 mm) Calc 5 m² m²
U Plaster = 6 parts sand, 1 cement, 2 liquid clay *** Info
V Total sand per bed (T x .01 m / 10mm deep plaster) Calc 0.05 m³ m³
W Total sand for beds of one size (A x V) Calc 0.05 m³ m³
X $___ Total sand to buy for plaster 0.1 m³
Y Total cement per bed [1 bag=12 m²@10mm] (T/12) Calc 0.4 bag bag
Z Total cement for beds of one size (A x Y) Calc 0.4 bags bags
AA Total cement bags for plaster 1 bags
BB $___ Total cement bags to buy (M + AA) 3 bags
CC Total 10 mm hoop rods per bed (6 meter lengths) Calc 2.5 rods rods
DD Total hoop rods for beds of one size (A x CC) Calc 2.5 rods rods
all rods m. (presumes all
EE Total hoop rods to buy 2 rods = 12 beds covered)
FF $___ Total alcathene pipe (12 mm) cover hoop rods 12 m
GG Soil (250 mm deep x 1200 mm wide x length) Calc 1.05 m³ ea m³ ea
HH Total earth for beds of that size (A x GG) Calc 1.05 m³ m³
I I $___ Total raised bed soil to buy or find (weedfree) 2 m³

11
Material Needed
On the prior two pages, we provide a spread sheet with calculations. These are logical calculations based on our actual
experience. However, as any builder will tell you, precision is difficult given the variables in the field. Use these as guidelines,
but use your brain and common sense. Order extra and come up with a plan to use leftovers.

Bulk Material
One of the challenges in writing a booklet like this is writing for some people who live on our island, and others who do
not. The bulk material for people on Waiheke is easy - order it from the quarry and ask that they mix lots of “fines” in with
the Gap 40. Since the quarry workers are familiar with earth brick building on Waiheke they tend to understand what is
needed. If the Gap 40 batch looks bony, change the order so a percentage is what the quarry calls “quarry scrapings”, the first
layer of subsoil removed as they begin quarrying - a layer with more clay in it. For our beds, we ordered 6 m3 of Gap 40 and
2 m3 of Scrapings. Please note that this is somewhat of an art, because the material from the quarry is not consistent. The
fines (as in fine or small particles) are important for our purposes. The goal is to get a mix the consistency of stiff porridge
when poured into the wheelbarrow that then absorbs enough of the water that in 10 to 20 minutes or so the mix in the
mould is strong enough not to slump when the moulds are removed. The “fines” and the bit of clay in the scrapings are
what causes this to absorb the water and cause the mix to set. Note that when the moulds are lifted, the mix is still very soft,
almost like gelatin. The mix is different than normal concrete, where moulds have to stay on much longer because the only
hardening that occurs in normal concrete is the chemical reaction.

The bulk material for people living elsewhere requires a bit more research. The first place to start is to go to your local
road mix quarry and see what they have on offer. Basically, you want a mix that will set in a few minutes sufficiently strong
that it does not slump. If you are unsure, ask if you can do some tests. In the Waiheke system, we use 13 parts of aggregate
to 1 part of cement and only enough water to make it like thick porridge. The ratio is not, pardon the pun, set in stone. It
derives from the amount and size of stone in the mix. This is why mortar, made of sand and cement requires as 3:1 ratio,
while concrete made of a mix of aggregate including larger stones only requires 6:1 to get strength. The mix we use is not
like mortar or concrete because those bulk materials cost considerably more and give an engineered strength not needed
for a simple bed used to grow plants. Because we do not need this, the bulk material is far more flexible. The main thing to
avoid is something that will crack due to shrinkage; break due to weakness; wear away due to softness; or take too long to
set, meaning the workers must wait around to lift off the mould and start the next bed.

How much?
Because each mould is of a different length, you need to do some calculations. See the spread sheets. On our job, we
ordered 6 m3 of Gap 40 and 2 m3 of Scrapings and 20 bags of cement. We ended up with half a bag of cement and a small
pile of Gap 40 and scrapings, perhaps 1/2 m2 which is why we put such a large irregularity percentage. Our ground surface
was not level, and we used some to fill in the gaps (very easy to do as the boards are straight – if the ground underneath
undulates, it will simply take more mix to fill it in). Also the first two beds poured did not have bracing on the side timbers,
and we observed that they were bulging out in the middle. Thus not only made the side timbers harder to lift off, it used
more mix. On Waiheke, note that delivery cost may exceed the cost of materials. You are better off ordering more and
planning to use it somewhere else, rather than need an emergency truck delivery to finish the beds while your workers wait.

Cement
In simple terms you first divide the sum total of all beds by 13 (since you are using 13 parts aggregate to 1 part cement

12
– if you need to add more cement to assure strength, vary the cement calculation accordingly). Then you divide the plaster
by 6 (since you are using 6 parts sand to 1 part cement). The easiest way to do it is to arrange that extra unopened bags can
be returned to the store, and buy a few extra.

Plaster
Plaster uses 1 part cement 6 parts sand and 2 parts clay paint (made from free clay you dig out of the earth). Estimating
the amount of cement depends on how thick you plaster. We did our calculations on 10 mm thick plaster. Your surface
area is 290 mm high plus 150 mm on top length. We only plastered the top 100 mm of the inside wall.
Prepare the Mixing Area
A truckload of Gap 40
requires a large dumping
space right next to the
mixer. Water is required
to add to the mix and to
clean up (very important).
Power can be electricity
or petrol depending on
the mixer. The Waiheke
loaner mixer is electric.
Unless you want the
leftovers to stabilise a
driveway or footpath, lay
down protective tarps or fabric before setting up. Remember that the workers must wheelbarrow the mix from the mixer
to the moulds.

We recommend two wheelbarrows if you have two workers. If you use just one, you will find one worker standing
around waiting. We recommend having a plastic bucket to add the water, estimating with a hose is inaccurate. Also
have two solid shovels., one for mixing, one for filling the mould. If you can find a steel barrel cut end to end, it makes an
excellent bed to drop the cement bag into for shovelling. Order the Gap 40 and other materials so they arrive shortly
after the workers have completed preparing the mixing area. If it is to sit, best to cover it with a tarp. Make sure the cement
is protected from water or damp. If you have access to a pressure washer, this is strongly recommended for fast cleanup.
Otherwise have cleaning brushes and a hose. You will be cleaning not just at the end of the day, but during the mixing.
In the photo above, the work site is about 3m x 3m in the corner of a driveway made of the same quarry material, so we
only needed to scrape away the 7-14 surface stone. It is very helpful if you can get running water to the mixing site, as it is
essential to clean up constantly. Wet cement is easy to wash, hard to remove when dry.
Setting up the Mould
Before making the mix, the two workers set the mould on the ground. Make sure that the mould is square and plumb.
In some cases, on irregular ground you will need to put stones or some sort of spacer below parts of the mould. This is
OK, it just means more mix will be used to fill in the gaps. Make sure that the wooden side timbers are wet. Some people
apply releasing oil, but we did not find this was necessary. Also store-bought releasing oil smells awful and we wondered
what chemicals we might be embedding in the raised bed walls. We found that soaking the timbers was adequate to

13
assure it would break free. While it should
seem obvious, make sure the timbers
have the handles facing upward and the
slightly trimmed ends facing inward – the
trimming makes a smoother transition
from the steel to the wood. Otherwise
there is a 3 mm bump to smooth out
afterwards.
Making the Mix
13:1 aggregate to cement ratio.
. Pour a bucket of water into the mixer
first
. Shovel in 6 shovels of gap 40
3. One shovel of cement - make sure each shovel is equal amount
4. More water to keep it mushy
5. One Shovel of the quarry scrapping
. Six Shovels of Gap 40
7. Add enough water to be mushy, like porridge
8. When mixed pour into wheel barrow and make the next mix. Depending on who is ahead, the mixer or the pourer
wheels the barrow over.
9. If you take a break, add a bucket or two of water and keep mixer moving to
clean it out whilst on break
Setting reinforcing steel, water pipes & drainage
Reinforcing steel is not required, but in the opinion of our experts, its cheap
insurance. If the ground moves (such as shrinking in a drought), the bed may lose
some of its support, as it has no foundation in the ground like a normal building.
Specially designed deformed steel (also called rebar) is embedded in the middle of
the mix and its tensile strength keeps the bed from cracking. Engineers tell
us two rods one about 100 mm above the other are even better but we opted for one. Basically, the
worker beds the 10 mm (D10) rods in the shape of the middle of the mould and drops them in.
Overlapped rods can either be welded, or a 400 mm overlap tied with steel wire (see photo).
Buy both from building supply stores.
You will note the old, ugly looking galvanised power pole bolts we used to
create a bending jig. This was one of the add-ons. We observed the workers
were hand bending, trying to guess the bed dimensions, and we realised
repeating this 26 times would add some serious labour time. So
foraging in the garage came up with some old bolts that we welded
onto the moulds. We also welded the washers about 12 mm below
the bolt head so the rebar would not slip down while being bent. In
the photo you also may note the ropes used to lift the mould off.
This did not last. As we observed how the workers handled the

14
mould we made up steel handles and welded them on the moulds at the right balance point. This field work probably added
to the total of 32 hours (time two men) it took to make the 13 beds. The first day we made one bed, the next day, five.
Decide where the water pipe will come up and have a valve attached to the drip irrigation.
Run the water pipe under the mould to where a “tee” connector will link it into the water
system. We observe that many people forget this stage and then have a garden with hoses
running all around. Over time, hoses are far more expensive than buried black plastic pipe
connected with permanent fittings. They also look messy and get in the way.
If the bed is on a slope, or if your subsoil has very poor drainage, you may want to install
a drain coil or a piece of left over spouting pipe under the
lowest side (see arrow). Otherwise in a hard rain you may
find you built a bathtub and all your recently germinated
plants are awash.
Pouring into the Mould
. At this point, we found the mould top too narrow to
allow us to pour the mix into the mould directly from
the barrow. We thought about altering the mould to
allow pouring in, but the lead builder, Gordon, felt the
time savings would be minimal. So for now, shovel it in.
Begin with pouring into the side mould part because
the side timbers come up first, so this will be the first to set
or “jell”.
. As you pour, lift the D10 rebar so that it ends up
suspended about in the middle of the mould, both vertical
and horizontal.
3. Use a rod to tamp the mix to make sure it fills all the gaps.
4. As you are pouring into the moulds, be sure to insert the
hoop rod pipes. These pipes can be made of any sort of
rigid plumbing or electrical conduit pipe. We made ours
out of all the surplus pipe left over from the job site. The
best pipe is wide enough to easily allow the rods to drop
in, but not wide enough for the covering alcathene pipe
so that the alcathene stops the hoops from dropping
further in. See arrow.
5. NOTE: We did not put full length pipes in our job,
and found the first rain they filled with water. Water and
steel rods don’t mix well over time, so we had to drill out
through the bottom to drain out the water. Put 290 or
300 mm pipes in so the bottom is in touch with the earth.
To be safe after they have been inserted, drop and tamp a
piece of the hoop steel (or any leftover D10 rod) to make
sure no aggregate mix got into the bottom of the pipe

15
. NOTE: We put in one pipe on each long end, and then evenly spaced hoop pipes on the sides. We find this works
well except on the corners where the wind catches the cloth and lifts it. In the photo, the arrow shows where would
had to lay a rock to hold it down. We now tend to think it would be better to add additional pipes at each angle. The
pipes serve a dual purpose. They not only support the hoops in raising the cloth above the ground, but the cloth can
be anchored in the pipe by lacing the hoop through it. In the drawing above, we provide a revised suggestion on where
insert the plastic pipes.
7. When the mould is full, smooth off the top with a trowel (or wooden block)
8. NOTE: James and Grant prefer a rounded top, it looks nicer, but there is debate on seating comfort. If you live on
Waiheke Island, best to stop by both James’s garden and Gabriella’s to see which one feels more comfortable for sitting.
9. The clay in the mix should rapidly absorb water at a microscopic way, so the mix will not slump when lifting the mould.

16
Lift the Moulds
Knowing when to lift is an art. A Waiheke mix jells about 10-20 minutes after pouring, enough to lift the mould off
without it slumping. The only way to know is to test. Begin by lifting the side board brace (used on longer side boards).

17
Next lift the side boards. Use a pry bar to break the bond if the timber is sticking to the mix. Note that the builders
found it faster to lift both moulds upward at the same time. As soon as the timbers are off, wash them clean. This allows
more time for the end moulds to set.
Note: In our first set of moulds, the timber slides up vertically. An alternative design would have one side of the outer
pocket be bolted on. In this way the outer pocket would be removed and the timber peeled away.
Lift up and remove the end moulds. Note how in the first lift (left), the workers had straddle the bed to get the mould off.
In the second photo it shows where metal handles were welded on. Wash the end moulds
The pouring is now complete, but the bed has many rough edges, especially where the timbers slot in. Shortly after, when
the mix feels stable, brush off the new bed using a soft broom or rubber gloves.
Check your work to make sure pipes have been installed. While wet, the bed still can be altered.

Plaster the beds


There are several ways to plaster. Grant has a particular recipe, but we relied on the recipe of Gordon and Matthew, as
they have been making mud brick buildings for over a decade. At one time they made a standard mortar plaster that was
grey, and then applied a clay slurry. However with experimentation they found they could add clay to the plaster and get a
soft yellow-orange colour that will never wear through because it is part of the plaster. The recipe is simple: six parts sand
- one part cement - two parts clay slurry. Mix in the cement mixer to get a stiff plaster that can be applied by hand wearing
double dipped fishing gloves or with a trowel.
Make the clay slurry
First make the clay part. For people on Waiheke, the landscape supplier next to the quarry has a bank of clay that is the
right colour. For people
who do not have access to
it, look for a rich golden
red clay, and conduct
experiments. See the
upper left photo for the
approximate raw colour
of the Waiheke clay. If
you wish to test different
clays, remember that the
dry colour is significantly
different than the wet.
Crumble the clay and
put it in a bucket. If it is
wet, that’s OK too. Add
water slowly and mix
with a plaster mixer (an
attachment for a drill) or
by hand. When completely
mixed, place wind cloth or

18
a screen over a bucket and pour the clay through it. This will filter out all the stones and larger particles, thus making you a
bucket of clay slurry. The consistency should be that of thick paint. Not bad for free.

Preparation and plastering


Normally you allow at least several days before plastering. You want the beds to harden and do any shrinking before
plastering, but it is good if they are still somewhat “green” so the chemical and mechanical bonding of the bed and the
plaster is strong.
• Do not start too late in the day. After the plaster is applied, it needs to sit for several hours and then you come back
wearing rubber gloves to hand smooth off the
surface. If it gets dark, you may not be able to see
what you are doing. If you leave it until the next
day, the plaster will be so hard, you won’t be able
to get a good finish.
• Soak the walls of the bed. This is important,
especially so on hot sunny days. Otherwise the
water in the plaster gets drawn out.
• We find apply the plaster by hand wearing
rubber gloves allows the worker to fill all the
cracks. A good plaster can do the same with a trowel, but a novice will sometimes find gaps – although in some cases
they won’t find the gaps until a few years later when the plaster falls off.
• You may want a tarp on the ground to capture the plaster that falls off. Reuse it, but make sure it does not get too dry.
• We find the best earth-brick plasters use a sort of hand-flicking motion that fires the plaster into the wall, and their
hand then presses it in further. Keep practising.
• We did our material calculations based on 10 mm of plaster.
• When you are done, clean up the equipment and take a break.
• Come back about 3 hrs later and hand rub off all the ridges and bumps. At this time they should come off easily. If you
leave it overnight you may find it solid and impossible to smooth.

Finishing the beds - soil and water


We do not claim to know everything there is to know about soil.
Suffice it to say that different plants need different soils, and different
gardens need different layers of soil in the raised bed. It does make
sense however to have a good idea of what you are planting before you
decide what soil to put in. However, whatever you put in, you don’t
want weeds from the original ground surface growing up into the bed.
The best advice is to go to your local appliance store and ask for the
discarded cardboard boxes. Unlike the wine merchant, whose boxes
are small and sometimes coated with inks, the boxes for appliances like
refrigerators are big and clean. Lay the cardboard on the bottom and
it will block out the sunlight that the weeds need to grow. Do not lose
your irrigation pipe that should be at the bottom of the bed wall.
Fill with earth. For cheque book gardeners in New Zealand, a
company called Living Earth (www.livingearth.co.nz) provides a mix

19
especially for raised beds. It is not inexpensive, but it is guaranteed to be weed-free and to have all sorts of things that will
make plants happy. Whatever soil you use, be sure to cover it with mulch. Protect your soil.
Note the black pipes running along the ground outside the bed. These are standard farm pipes. We set them on the
ground and dug a 20 mm trench so they were just below the ground surface. All were connected up to the water source
with Tee connectors. At the raised bed end install a shut off valve and then a drip-feed pipe that runs either on or just below
the surface of the soil. In this way, you get a complete watering system that should never need maintenance or replacement.
Drip Feed Irrigation
We went to www.fruitfedsupplies.co.nz to purchase drip feed irrigation. We purchased the surface mount pipes, the
alternative are the slightly larger embedded pipes. More than just plastic pipe with holes in them, the pipes pressurise in a
way that 100 mtres of pipe equally distributes the water to the whole system. The pipes have some sort of device behind
each hole that regulates the water to keep flow going t all 100 metres of the pipe. Your installed farm pipes coming to each
bed are blocked off at their end, and a small plastic fitting is pressed into the large pipe, piercing a hole in the side of the
pipe. The drip-irrigation pipe is pressed onto the fitting and then draped in the bed. You should allow two to three lengths
meaning if the bed is 3 metres long, loop it twice (6 metres) or thrice (9 metres). Why two or three? It has to do with the
extent to which your soil spreads the water (capillary action). We found our topsoil which is light and drains well needs
more pipes because the water does not spread but flows rather quickly to the bottom and then into the subsoil. We need
three lengths which then waters rapidly and effectively. At the end of the drip-feed pipe the easiest way to terminate it is
to take a one inch (25 mm) section of the 13mm plastic farm pipe, slice it linearly, fold the irrigation pipe over and use the
sliced farm pipe to hold it folded over.
The Hoops
One of the key elements
of a raised bed is the ability
to protect the plants and soil
from wind, too much sunlight,
birds, animals and other crawly
creatures. To do this each bed
gets its own canopy of various
weaves of cloth... wind cloth,
bird cloth, shade cloth. Part
of our improvement over
the original system was to embed recycled rigid water and conduit pipe into the bed itself so that we could drop in metal
hoops covered in black alcathene pipe.

Round or Rectangle, that is the question


In our workshop we saw a beautiful
demonstration of bending a 10 mm road around
a large barrel and then around a jig to produce a
pigtail upon which to affix various tie-downs.
However, we then spoke to another local
veteran of decades of raised bed gardening who
said it took him years of pushing cloth back up and
having it slide back down again to make his hoops

20
rectangular. Up 875 mm, 90º bend, across 1200 mm, 90º bend back down, 875 mm. This comes out of a 3 m rod which
means you get two hoops out of a standard 6 m length. The same 875 height means the longest bed you can fit one 6 m
longitudinal bar is 4.2 meters, which is one reason why we made our long bed that size.
You can either use deformed D10 rods, or purchase round 10 mm rod. We bought the round rod, but found it cost
more than the D10 deformed rods. Best to shop around. Then buy standard 12 or 13 mm alcathene water pipe in 100
metre rolls. Be certain to ask for the best price here. We did and was astounded when the “best price” was about 40% of the
list price.
• Cut the straight rod in half for the side hoops and cut to size for the longitudinal hoop (measure the bed end to end
between the end pipe slots and add 1700 mm for the vertical (850 x 2).
• Slide the alcathene pipe over the rod, but do not cover the last 200 mm of the rod. Cut the alcathene off. Then slide
the pipe 100 mm, so at each end the steel rod has 100 mm exposed.
• Put the plastic covered pipe in a vice and hand bend it 90º 285 mm from the end.
• Turn it around and do the same on the other end. When you make the second bend, make sure it is on the same
plane as the first. Have someone help hold it parallel.
• All the short side hoops will be the same size, even for the octagon.
• Your first few may not look great. Best to bend and test.
If you have done it right, the hoops should slot into the embedded pipes in the beds and sit tall and strong. When you
drape cloth over them lift the hoop out of its pipe sleeve, tread the hoop through the fabric and put the hoop back into the
pipe sleeve. This anchors the cloth. If the cloth has holes smaller than the 10 mm rod, you may want to either make a strong
hole or use some sort of clipping device.

21
Finishing the garden
The beds are now done and ready to plant. What’s next?
The footpaths. Hopefully you have spaced the beds 1 meter apart and they will not be used for growing but for walking
and wheelbarrows. You have a wide range of choices. You can leave them in grass, you can cover them in stone chip or even
brick paving. What we decided to do was to lay down more cardboard from the appliance store and then put down 10
m3 of freshly chipped pine from our friendly island firewood supplier. Pine keeps insects away. It is wonderful under foot
and feet feel dry even after a soaking rain. Eventually it will break down, giving us a free supply of mulch right next to the
beds.

22
This book can 40
pages for the same
price - so let’s add
more knowledge:

Please contribute
your knowledge
The re is more to know about raised bed gardening. This book is a collaborative effort. It is being sold at the printing
cost, and the print-on-demand service we use charges the same price for 24 to 40 pages. So this becomes an opportunity to
record more knowledge for the reader.
As prime author, I am not a gardener but a designer. So I designed the moulds and then recorded the steps so someone
unfamiliar with the subject could follow them and get the same results we did.
This creates the opportunity for others with expertise to provide their knowledge, so the book gets better.
Because it is print-on-demand, we can keep updating it.

To help us, please email editor@jhpublishing.com

The next pages have suggested headings.

23
G ardening Tools

What’s best to buy. Make your own. Historic tools.

Help Wanted Completing this section

24
S un, wind and water control

When is there too much sun? When does wind hurt and what to do about it? When is the right time to water?

Help Wanted Completing this section

25
G ood bugs - bad bugs

What insects are helpful, which are bad, and what to do about them.

Help Wanted Completing this section

26
C ompanion Planting

Some plants help other plants. Providing a list is helpful.

Help Wanted Completing this section

27
S equential planting.

If you plant all the tomatoes at the same time expect a bumper crop all at once, far too many to enjoy and then they are
all gone.

Help Wanted Completing this section

28
I solation Planting

Some plants keep to themselves and which spread like crazy. The latter should be in their own beds; in some cases they
are best done in octagons – the smallest size raised bed.

Help Wanted Completing this section

29
C ompost Bins

How to make them

Help Wanted Completing this section

30
C ompost

How to do it

Help Wanted Completing this section

31
B ocashi - composting on boosters

How to do grow them

Help Wanted Completing this section

32
T opsoil

How to make it better. The art of topsoil

Help Wanted Completing this section

33
G rowing plants from seeds

How to do it

Help Wanted Completing this section

34
S eed saving and heritage seeds

How to do it

Help Wanted Completing this section

35
F ruit Trees

How to grow them

Help Wanted Completing this section

36
P runing & Grafting

How and when to do it


Help Wanted Completing this section

37
C anning

How to do it
Help Wanted Completing this section

38
Variable Width Raised Bed Forms Order Sheet
3 mm common steel
Note: The original design is for a 1.2 m wide bed. Some prefer a wider bed so in this design the middle inner and outer plate is
cut in the middle. An additional Angle exterior brace is cut for each end and 16 mm holes drilled so a stretching insert (wood)
can be bolted in, making the mould wider.

6 OUTER ANGLE PLATES (symetrical) BRACES (all 50 mm wide) 3 mm steel perpendicular to plates
.292 mm H x .620 mm Top x .648 mm Bot
0.1851 m2 each $_________ x 4 =$________ TOP 256 mm long (make 16) (this is 156 mm plus 50 mm + 50 mm)
0.0180 m2 $_______each x 16 = $___________
(Then cut two of them in half - see STRETCH PLATES below) Drill one 16 mm hole in each in the middle of all 16 of the braces

6 INNER ANGLE PLATES (symetrical) STRETCH SIDES 342 mm long (make 8) (this is 292 mm plus 50 mm)
.292 mm H x .500 mm Top x .466 mm Bot 0.0171 m2 $_______each x 8 = $___________
0.1410 m2 each $_________ x 4 =$________ Drill three 16 mm holes in these plates (centre & 50 mm from each end)

(Then cut two of them in half- see STRETCH PLATES below) TIMBER SLOTS (make 8)- 50 mm angle iron 342 mm high (see photo below)
50 mm angle iron 342 mm each $_______ x 8 = $________
4 OUTER STRAIGHT PLATES (asymetrical) Timber slots weld onto straight exterior brace to form a sliding pocket for the
.292 mm H x .186 mm Top x .200 mm Bot 90d 300 x 50 timber forms - When setting the pitch angle of the angle iron, test
0.0564 m2 each $_________ x 4 =$________ an offcut of the actual timber thickness to assure the 300 x 50 will slide easily.

4 INNER STRAIGHT PLATES (asymetrical) NOTE: If side timbers longer than 3 m are used, the user may wish to fabricate
.292 mm H X .124 mm Top x .109 mm Bot 90d a different way to hold the board so it peels away on one end, rather than pull
0.0340 m2 each $_________ x 4 =$________ upwards where the sliding friction is greater. Consider a hinge or bolt & nut.

HANDLES 30mm wide 2 bends ea. 4 for moulds MIDDLE TIMBER BRACE 50 mm wide x 4.622 m long
0.0075 m2 each $_________ x 4 =$________ = Total of 0.2311 m2 in 7 parts = $_______ (see diagram for 7 parts)
30 mm w. 4 bends ea 8 handles for ea timber set
0.0105 m2 each $_________ x 8 =$________ BENDING JIG BOLTS Weld on 4 16 mm x 400 mm bolts 250 mm above the
top of each angle to bend the D10 reinforcing rod in the shape of the bed (see photo)

.310 .310 .250 .250 For users intending to stretch the


Timber middle support brace moulds for wider than 1200 mm
STRETCH STRETCH Stretch
this brace is cut into two parts
Stretch Outer Inner Angle
Angle Plate to PLATE PLATE Plate to drill holes are cut and a parallel
.292 make wider bed (Outer) (Inner) make wider .292 100 x 50 board is affixed to widen the span
(Cut 2 From below From below bed (Cut 2
from below) from below)
.324 90° 90° .233 90° .233
.324 .100 .647 .647

.050
.244 1.294 .244
.500 On the stretch plates, cut in
.620
.250 .250 half then weld an exterior .290
.310 .310
Outer Inner brace on both halves (where
Angle Angle the plate was cut) with 16 mm This is a stand-alone brace that straddles the
.292 Plate .292 holes aligned so they can be middle of the side timber forms and keeps
Plate bolted together. To stretch a .314 .314
(Make 6) (Make 6) them from spreading. It may be easier to
user cuts a board of the
.324 .324
.233 .233
desired width and bolts it in. make 50 mm wide strips and cut them to fit
.648 .466 the actual timber when assembled. For timber
longer than 3 m. make a second brace
These plates make the inner & outer angled forms at the ends of the moulds.
NOTE: If the stretch plate is used with inserts,
make the width of the bar to match.
After Assembly of Plates - On the middle stretch plate weld a supporting
Exterior Brace so it lines up with the other cut stretch plate . This enables
a user to insert a wooden "stretcher" to make the mould wider.

.186 87°
90°
.124 These plates connect the angled end forms to the straight wooden boards.
93°
Outer After Assembly of Plates: Welded to both sides, one Exterior Brace is affixed to connect
Straight Inner the inner and outer sides of the moulds. The side steel for these braces is 90 degree angle iron
.292
Plate .292 Straight that forms the pocket for the Timber Slot to connect the 300 x 50 timber side forms.
90° 87° (Make 4) Plate NOTE: If side timbers are very long (3-6 m) on one end of the "pockets" do not use an angle iron,
(Make 4) but instead fabricate a removable outer plate so the plate can be undone and the timber pulled
.200 .109 away from the form, rather than lifted upwards.
93°

On 8 of the brace plates, These 8 brace plates


drill 16 mm holes to allow are used to hold the
stretching the mould width timbers. These use
angle iron to Lifting handles for steel moulds
QUOTE SUMMARY
using a user-supplied
timber insert hold the timber (Make 4)
Exterior Brace .156 in place
.156
(Make 8
with Indicates 90 degree
.150
Angle-Iron Inner & Outer
stretchers Timber Slot (see photo) $___________ Total Materials
.342

.050
&
.342

.290 8 with .290 Jig $___________ Labour to Weld


angle Bolt At the top of the mould, $___________ Delivery
iron) Timber weld lifting handles where
.226
.226
(allows for Slot one end is on the inner $___________ Tax @ _______%
The Exterior Braces hold the inner and 3 mm steel) angle plate and the other ===========================
outer sides of the forms together. end is on the outer angle plate
Cut 3 mm flat stock in 50 mm strips.
$___________ Total Quote
Fabricate on the forms as you build.
Make sure top opening is 150mm, Lifting handles for side timbers
bottom 220mm. Cut a 12 mm "lifting bolt" (Make 8 per set)
hole in ALL top braces. On straight braces
weld inner & outer 50 mm angle-iron to form PLEASE SEND QUOTE TO:
.150
Timber Slots to slide in the side timber forms. Drill 3
screw holes
Name ______________________
NOTE: If side timbers are over 3 m in length, each side
.050
.050
E-mail______________________
on one of each timber end slots, do not use
an angle iron but a removable support so Make 8 Lifting Handels
Phone _____________________
the timber can be pulled away instead of for the timber side moulds Address: ____________________
pulled up - otherwise the friction is too great. NOTE: Drill 3 holes in each end ____________________________
Screw into timber using
39
stainless steel screws.
.156
END FORMS - (Make two) .150 Cross
Section
.220 View
NOTE: This diagram shows a standard 1.2 m wide bed. To expand
the width (for example to 1.4 m) simply cut the central angled Lifting Bottom with
plates (top and bottom in this diagram) and weld in a duplicate Handle Inner Steel
Exterior brace. Then separate them and insert a drilled piece of wood. Side of
Example: to get 1.4 wide, add a 200 x 50 mm x 292 mm to the center Two Exterior Braces Form
Form
side by side and bolted
13
.461 5°
.648 .226
.620 Bottom
Outer

.2 3
.162 .220 .150 Side of

8
Form
.1
.461 50 .500 (3mm steel)
.466

.6 20
.6
.220

48
Bolt with
.66 3 16 mm
bolts
.332
°5

8
.332 .2 3
13

Straight Exterior Braces


.150 . Angle Iron Timber Brace 2
at with .1 6
top .200
.109 .124 .186
.220 1.2 m top to top
at 1.1 bottom to bottom
bottom
1.57

Top (bird's eye) View


Optional Stretcher
Timber Middle Support Bar (separate piece
drops over timbers to prevent bulge)

Any Length 300 x 50 timber


(actual 290 x 45)
Due to 2D aspect of this
drawing, the connection of
the timber form to the angle
iron form may be confusing.
Make certain that
the pocket of the Inside of each 300 x 50
timber holder is side timber is flush with
precisely 100 mm outside of steel form.
in overlap so when This produces a 3 mm
you make boards "bump" due to timber
they can be equal laying on top of 3 mm
length steel. You can either
hand smooth afterwards
or trim end of timber so
it is flush w inside of
steel form.
Cross
Section
showing
.350

timber Jig to
forms bend
Exterior Brace D10 rebar Jig for D10 rebar
On one mould, weld
four 16 mm x 400 mm
galv bolts so the top is
.290

in the middle of the


300 x 50 mould. At about 15 mm
(dressed 290 x 45) Lifting handle below the bolt head,
weld a large washer.

40

Anda mungkin juga menyukai