Hello!
I've built the frame for a playhouse for the kids and now that I'm about to put on the "facade," the regular exterior paneling (22mm) feels like total overkill for the little house. I'm considering using interior paneling (untreated pine) instead. I will also have boards on the inside, so the walls should still be stable. It must be horizontal paneling because I want to nail the boards directly to the studs; otherwise, I would have used raw wood for the whole thing.
Does anyone think this will work or has done something similar?
 
I did just as you described (and then painted the facade, of course) and it works perfectly for the small structure! One of the reasons I did this was to make the walls as light as possible; the playhouse is designed so that it can easily be unscrewed and sold in a few years when it has lost its appeal to the children.
 
Yes, that's my thought too, I have built everything in modules so that it can be easily disassembled. How have you fixed the walls to the floor and ceiling? I was thinking of using lag bolts and possibly metal brackets where needed.
 
To the floor, I have just screwed the wall module's horizontal beam (I have a frame around each wall side, so to speak) directly into the floor with wood screws. It has stood firm so far.
At the ceiling, the rafters (only 45x95) are screwed to the wall framing with angle brackets.
 
thinking about whether I should use nails (with a real flat head) or go with dyckert, or even screws - what have you used?
 
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