HawaiiYurts
Industry Specialist, Yurts of Hawaii
HopefulHomemaker, Congratulations! I hope you do yourselves a biiiig favor and make sure that you have enough people on hand. Strong, capable people. We've put up all kinds of different yurts, over 60 now(!! where does the time go?!). On 24' and larger yurts, we have found that 4 people is our minimum preference. 6 would be max. Five is ideal. 4 people can pair up and work in tandem on a lot of things, doubling the speed, and one person works to keep one step ahead, make sure all the steps are done and grab parts/tools/etc when needed.
Safety should be priority, with attention to detail a close second. And a good tip is to be sure that everyone knows who is in charge of leading the crew. "Too many chiefs and not enough Indians" is the way one old timer put it to us once and it's very accurate. The person leading should read through the set up manual a couple or more times, several days ahead so they get familiar with the process and can be thinking one step ahead. They should make sure that the tools and materials needed are ready to go on site when you start. Don't skimp on that scaffold... build it! It will save you so much in the end and you can re-use the lumber later.
We work with Colorado Yurts so they're the ones I know the most about; they do have the best winterized kit I've seen on the market and also have a recycled denim insulation option that does meet r-value codes, so that's one less thing to worry about with the codes in your area. Good to hear your inspector seems fine with the idea! I'm always glad to hear about areas where they are yurt friendly.
Rent a small generator for the set up. (Or buy one? Sounds like you'll be wanting one! The small Honda 2000's are super quiet, efficient and small, easy for you to move and start.) The roof is going to be a couple hundred pounds. One person... I see no way, no how. Two people... That would be very difficult and likely dangerous. Three... difficult but do-able. Four... now we're talking.
You know what's always struck me as funny, Jafo? The worst horror stories we have heard have been about yurts set up by contractor's and long time stick-builders. Isn't that odd? I think it's because yurts buck a lot of their hard and fast rules, so they try to go with what is logical to their wood framing paradigms and end up making the yurt far more dangerous. One that we heard about, a contractor didn't have the rafters set on the cable at the perimeter, rather, he thought the cable was to keep the lattice walls in, then they fastened every rafter to the wind kit studs. That's a pretty common assumption when people first see one actually. A lot of people who come to our office are surprised to learn that the wind kit studs are not needed for structural support. Aloha!
Safety should be priority, with attention to detail a close second. And a good tip is to be sure that everyone knows who is in charge of leading the crew. "Too many chiefs and not enough Indians" is the way one old timer put it to us once and it's very accurate. The person leading should read through the set up manual a couple or more times, several days ahead so they get familiar with the process and can be thinking one step ahead. They should make sure that the tools and materials needed are ready to go on site when you start. Don't skimp on that scaffold... build it! It will save you so much in the end and you can re-use the lumber later.
We work with Colorado Yurts so they're the ones I know the most about; they do have the best winterized kit I've seen on the market and also have a recycled denim insulation option that does meet r-value codes, so that's one less thing to worry about with the codes in your area. Good to hear your inspector seems fine with the idea! I'm always glad to hear about areas where they are yurt friendly.
Rent a small generator for the set up. (Or buy one? Sounds like you'll be wanting one! The small Honda 2000's are super quiet, efficient and small, easy for you to move and start.) The roof is going to be a couple hundred pounds. One person... I see no way, no how. Two people... That would be very difficult and likely dangerous. Three... difficult but do-able. Four... now we're talking.
You know what's always struck me as funny, Jafo? The worst horror stories we have heard have been about yurts set up by contractor's and long time stick-builders. Isn't that odd? I think it's because yurts buck a lot of their hard and fast rules, so they try to go with what is logical to their wood framing paradigms and end up making the yurt far more dangerous. One that we heard about, a contractor didn't have the rafters set on the cable at the perimeter, rather, he thought the cable was to keep the lattice walls in, then they fastened every rafter to the wind kit studs. That's a pretty common assumption when people first see one actually. A lot of people who come to our office are surprised to learn that the wind kit studs are not needed for structural support. Aloha!
