07-14-2019, 04:33 PM
I have two kiddos, and the younger one is soon going to outgrow her toddler bed. What I want to do is loft both of their beds (twins). I see two ways to do this
1) Make two separate loft beds
2) Make an L-shaped loft bed
#2 would be something like this (general style):
Either way the two beds are going to be in the same orientation in the corner. But an advantage of making a single L-shaped loft is I can drop one of the legs and open up the area underneath. One thing I'm concerned with is the attachment at this section (the blue circle). So many things I've seen online it seems like people are just screwing through one board and into the end grain of the other. This doesn't strike me as particularly strong. Any suggestions for how to strengthen this, or is this really not a concern? Is there hardware that is good for something like this? It needs to be removable/not permanent so I can actually get the bed out of the room in the future.
Another thing is so many of the online plans I see are using 2x material, which just strikes me as overkill. Is there any major issue anyone sees with using 1x material? Or has anyone ever used 1x in a bunk or loft bed? I would likely make the legs different than the above photo. More like 2 pieces joined at a right angle (glue, probably some screws, and some dominos to help with alignment). See below for a top view:
This leg setup would make it rather easy to attach all the horizontal pieces to the edges (as opposed to cutting out notches like in the first photo). It also takes up a bit less room (which could be a major issue for me, as the longest portion of the bed is going to be a tight fit between the all and door frame. Many of the bed plans made out of 2x4s result in too much room taken up if I put two loft beds in the L orientation).
Thoughts? Any other suggestions?
1) Make two separate loft beds
2) Make an L-shaped loft bed
#2 would be something like this (general style):
Either way the two beds are going to be in the same orientation in the corner. But an advantage of making a single L-shaped loft is I can drop one of the legs and open up the area underneath. One thing I'm concerned with is the attachment at this section (the blue circle). So many things I've seen online it seems like people are just screwing through one board and into the end grain of the other. This doesn't strike me as particularly strong. Any suggestions for how to strengthen this, or is this really not a concern? Is there hardware that is good for something like this? It needs to be removable/not permanent so I can actually get the bed out of the room in the future.
Another thing is so many of the online plans I see are using 2x material, which just strikes me as overkill. Is there any major issue anyone sees with using 1x material? Or has anyone ever used 1x in a bunk or loft bed? I would likely make the legs different than the above photo. More like 2 pieces joined at a right angle (glue, probably some screws, and some dominos to help with alignment). See below for a top view:
This leg setup would make it rather easy to attach all the horizontal pieces to the edges (as opposed to cutting out notches like in the first photo). It also takes up a bit less room (which could be a major issue for me, as the longest portion of the bed is going to be a tight fit between the all and door frame. Many of the bed plans made out of 2x4s result in too much room taken up if I put two loft beds in the L orientation).
Thoughts? Any other suggestions?