Nice looking gable roof shed with cedar shingles.
Shed roof structure design.
The apex can be central or offset.
Gable shed roof design.
There are many different roof styles used for building sheds.
The most common styles include gable gambrel skillion and saltbox roofs.
Each of these roof types is sloped to provide runoff for precipitation which means the design you go with will largely be a matter of aesthetic preference.
Making trusses to frame in your roof for a saltbox shed is really quite simple.
This design offers the most storage space for a storage shed provided the side walls are 6 foot or more.
In this case you have nothing more than a few carefully placed rafters that are laid on top of the outer walls.
Building a loft in the roof cavity is easy and provides much more storage space than either the gable or saltbox sheds.
The roof is typically sloped down from the connecting wall if the shed is attached to the side of your house or garage.
Of all the different types of roof the lean to is perhaps the easiest to build.
The roof slopes two ways from an apex.
The first thing you will need to do is find a flat open area with a concrete floor so that you can lay out a 2x4 or 2x6 that is at least as long as your shed is wide.
There are three main ways of framing the gable shed roof design.
The simplest is the roof beam.
Now whatever the width of your shed is measure and mark this off on the 2x4.
As opposed to the gable or saltbox designs.
How to frame a gambrel shed roof.
Shed roof design combines advantages of gable roof and flat roof with beams spanning between two walls one of which is higher than the other one thus creating a slant usually ranging usually ranging from 7 to 35.