Introduction: Wood Oven for Pizza, Bread Etc
On vacation I discovered a wood-burning oven in a garden that we really liked. That's when I got the idea to build something like this in our garden. When considering which material I could use for the substructure, the untreated oak sleepers that I still had came to mind. Just like the shoring beams for the roof. Everything was designed and manufactured entirely by myself. Only the wood-fired oven itself was ordered as a blank. The plastering of the oven etc. was again done by me.
Step 1: Frost Protection for Base Plate
First, a hole of approx. 2.30m x 1.50m and approx. 0.7m deep was dug with their own mini excavator. Antifreeze was then installed and compacted with the vibrating plate. Then the floor slab measuring 2.10m x 1.30m x 0.20m was shuttered with boards
Step 2: Concreting the Floor Slab
Before concreting, I put a plastic tube in the base plate to insert the power cable later. A lower and an upper layer of reinforcement is built into the base plate. The floor slab was concreted by hand with a concrete machine. About 0.6 qbm concrete.
Step 3: Cut Oak Sleepers
The oak sleepers were cut to size with a plunge saw and rail. It had to be cut from two sides. The thresholds have the dimensions of approx. 2.50m x 0.23m x 0.13m.
Step 4: Drill the Holes for Screwing
After everything was cut, all holes were drilled. First drilled through with the 30mm Forstner bit and then with the 8mm auger bit. Hole spacing was 6cm from the top and 6cm from the side.
Step 5: Milling Edges
All visible edges were bevelled with the edge router. A 45 degree cutter was used for this.
Step 6: Screw the Oak Sleepers Together
After all the material for the substructure had been cut and drilled, I was able to place the bottom row on the concrete base plate and screw it on. To do this, the screw hole was drilled out with a 6mm auger drill. Was screwed with plate head screws 8x320mm. There are plastic spacers of 10mm between Benon and oak sleepers so that the wood does not rest in the water when it rains. The whole thing is screwed at each end with two screws per sleeper. The second and third rows are also screwed onto the row below.
Step 7: Screw on the Shelf
Since the wood-fired oven will be on the right-hand side, a shelf was made on the left. For this purpose, oak thresholds of 90 cm were screwed on again. First drilled through with the 30mm Forstner bit and then with an 8mm auger bit. The screw hole was pre-drilled again with 6mm and then screwed with plate head screws 8x320mm.
Step 8: Seal the Drill Holes With Wooden Crosspieces
All holes drilled with the Forstner bit were sealed with 30mm cross-wood plates
Step 9: Cutting the Roof Structure
The entire roof was made of shoring beams. The dimensions per beam were approx. 3.00m x 0.16m x 0.13m. The two right posts are 1.60 m high. The first 20cm are cut into a width of 8cm and sit on the oak sleepers. These are screwed from the side with 2 carriage bolts 10x180mm each. The left posts are 1.27m long. The beams that rest on the posts on the right and left have a length of 2.00 m. The ridge beam also has a length of 2.00 m and rests on a 40 cm stamp. The stamps sit on two crossbeams.
Step 10: Roof Rafters
The six rafters are also made of shoring beams and are 1.70m long. These are screwed down as well as up with plate head screws 8x320mm
Step 11: Sanding and Glazing Wood
The oak sleepers and the shoring beams were first sanded with 120 grit and then with 240 grit. Eccentric sanders and delta sanders were used here. Then the entire wood was painted three times with light oak stain.
Step 12: Roof Boarding
The roof was paneled with tongue and groove boards. So that you can see the tongue and groove from below. The boards were screwed to each rafter with two 4.5x60 chipboard screws. The boards have the dimensions of 2.00m x 0.12m x 0.015m
Step 13: Trapezoidal Sheet Metal Roof
After the roof construction including tongue and groove boards was finished, the trapezoidal sheets were attached and screwed. These were screwed with trapezoidal sheet metal screws 4.8x60mm. Screwing was always done in the rafters. Verge sheets were screwed to the sides with 4.8x30mm trapezoidal sheet metal screws. The ridge was covered with a ridge sheet
Step 14: Attach Gutter
First, three gutter irons were screwed onto the lower rafter heads with a slight incline to the rear. Then the 2m long gutter was placed in the gutter iron and fastened. The downpipe was attached to the right and left of the rear post on the right and left. With two 90 degree bends at the top and 80 degrees backwards at the bottom so that the water runs away from the oak sleepers. The gutter is covered with end caps at the front and rear.
Step 15: Install Lighting
First I drilled all six holes with a 63mm hole saw. Then drilled in the middle of the hole with a 40 mm Forstner bit about 3 cm deep (hole for lamp socket GUI10. Then with a 10mm auger drill completely drilled through the rest. Wet room recessed spotlights were glued in the hole with silicone. I have the junction box exactly above the recessed spotlight screwed onto the hole so that the lamp cable could be inserted straight up.
Step 16: Plaster/paint the Oven
I plastered the oven with SM 700 and a wiping technique. First SM 700 was applied with a trowel and a light structure was brought in. As soon as the plaster was slightly set, I repeatedly dipped a large brush in water and stroked it over the plaster. this is how the rounded structure is created. Finally I painted the oven with a silicate paint.
Step 17: Install Oven
Now the time had come and the oven could be installed. The whole thing was not so easy because the stone oven weighs 1100kg and there was only limited space behind the house. With the tractor and front loader we got the oven out of the garage and put it to work.
Step 18: Install Flue Pipe
At the very end I installed the flue tube. A rain protection hood is placed on the flue pipe so that it does not rain into the pipe
First Prize in the
For the Yard
10 Comments
Question 2 months ago
I have a question: I see that you also replicated the table; do you have plans for that? (or can you explain what you used for it, and how you did it?). I'm kind of new to all of this. I love the looks of that table and want to build one like it.
2 months ago
OK, I thought - Wood Oven for Pizza - making mainly the OVEN! You outdid it and made the whole structure FOR the Pizza Oven - how cool is that? Great job.
2 months ago
That is amazing design thanks for sharing. https://www.mykfcexperience.website/
Question 3 months ago
I absolutely admire your enthusiasm for Pizza! I thought I was alone in this, but you have me convinced there are others.
I am very curious about the set-up in the foreground; Is that a Pizza davit? Or a Pizza crane?
Answer 3 months ago
Hi. In the foreground there is a grill. Here we grill steaks and sausages etc
3 months ago
Well done on the instructable and structure. One question:
You indicated, “Only the wood-fired oven itself was ordered as a blank.”
The oven was my main interest here, can you please provide a link or contact, I have not found anything like it by searching those terms. Thanks!
Reply 3 months ago
Hi. I ordered the kit from here. https://www.holzbackofen-polen.de/
3 months ago
Pretty cool yard and awesome instructable!!!
I have built my clay ofen in 2007 and use i more or less often... this Saturday i used my big electric pro pizza oven for 24 pizzas (I was able to set up the oven at a birthday party)
Question 3 months ago on Step 9
This is super cool, well done! On step 9, how did you attach the left posts?
Question 3 months ago on Step 16
First I want to compliment you on the design and execution of this project. I am curious what you used to make the oven itself as well.