How to Build a Bar to Make Your Home More Awesome

A wood bar can be a fun place to hang out and enjoy cocktails and the big game, because it can be used as a sundae bar for birthday parties, or serve as a gathering spot for coffee catch-ups with friends. Yes, a DIY bar is possible to build in a weekend. Here’s how to build a bar for your home.

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I mean, what’s better than a cool place to hang out with friends, catch a game, have a holiday or birthday party? This wood bar project was actually a mash-up of adulting, enjoying time with friends after the kids go to bed and, their young daughter’s impending birthday party. Here’s what you need to know to build a bar at your house.

How to Build a Bar: Materials

DIY bar materials don’t need to be exotic to draw friends together, but they probably should be in reasonably decent shape when you buy them. So rather than pull 2-bys off the top of the pile, I always dig down a little to the stuff that’s underneath. Since they’re always the straightest boards and least forklift-boot-marked-returned-est.

These Idaho Forest Doug Fir 2x4s I used for the frame were awesomely straight and for the wood nerds among us, because that grain is lusciously tight.

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How to build a bar Picking the straightest lumber helps

Build a Bar: Layout

If a wood bar ain’t comfortable to linger about, then it ain’t a bar. It’s a shelf with booze on it. 

We designed this wood bar to be 42 inches high and three 2x8s deep (22 ¼-inches) with a little wing wall jutting back.

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Before screwing anything together, a little tape on the floor is a handy way to time travel and get a feel for what real life will feel like once there’s something in the space.

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How to build a bar layout is essential

Build a Bar: Framing

When you consider how to build a bar at your house, my take is to go down the simplest path. The scaffold, so to speak, the wood bar hangs on is essentially a framed wall. When I build a wood bar, I lay out the front face of the bar with studs at 24 inches on-center.

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The wing wall is just a box. So the first time I framed the wing for this DIY bar, I just carried my 42-inch height through. However, the deck was pitched and therefore so was my wing wall, which I caught with a level. This can happen if you’re building a bar anywhere, say, in a basement. Slabs undulate. The point is, you want your transitions to be in plane with each other so the wood bar top’s base is flat. Straight is better than level.

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To say I used a lot of jobsite pocket screws on this one is an understatement. They’re everywhere. I used my mighty countersink–see my countersink video here–to pre-drill, then screw, the wing wall to the front wall.

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Bartop Base

Then I built what some framers call a “chicken ladder” for the bartop base. Since it is 16 inches wide, it allows the bar top to cantilever this base 2-inches on each side for a nice effect and it gives the top of the bar a little heft.

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How to build a bar: The bartop is fastened to the walls with…wait for it…pocket screws.

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Bartop

I’d love to go on a dilettante Instagram-y rant about craftsmanship and how craftsman-ish…no, no I wouldn’t…but I do like my work to be crisp, simple, and attainable. On a budget, too. And the bartop is where the glass sits and the elbow rests, so, let’s find a way to make a board intended to be a joist or rafter look like a place to cozy up and leave some marks in when the home team hits/misses the game winner. 

I picked the three cleanest 2x8s I could find. Nice, straight, untwisted White Fir. Next, I took my Bosch Colt router–I love this thing–and knocked the round-over off with a bevel bit, creating a micro-bevel like you’d see on pre-finished flooring. I matched up the boards–best sides up–bookmatching to a degree how they naturally fit together best and then installed them that way. I butted them edge to edge, clamped them tight, then fired in my #10 x 2 ½-inch Spax. It worked.

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DIY bar: The first board to screw down starts from the bartender’s side.

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You can blow in screws from the top like deck boards, and that could be a cool look. But for this DIY bar, I decided it’d be cleaner to screw up from my chicken ladder with 2 ½-inch screws. Also note that I screwed 2×4 blocks on the flat next to the “studs” on the chicken ladder. This makes fastening the bar top boards much easier.

Rack Brace

There was a wiggle in the wing wall. Even though it was screwed to the deck below it, it flexed. And even though the shiplap membrane applied later may have cinched it up, I don’t do things that way. So, to hedge my bets now, I hurled a 2×4 rack brace in there and it went from meh- to Monst-ah! This thing is pretty close to a bridge abutment at this point. Party on (top of it) Garth!

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And how did I make those connections? Pocket ‘em, baby.

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Bar Top Ends

More pocket screws! 

Then I cantilevered the bar top about 8 inches past the wing wall and the boards weren’t quite even with each other. Also, I didn’t want them to open where they were unsupported. After that, I supported them with some jobsite pocket screws. Next, I drove them front/back front back so that thing is locked down. A clamp snugged them up in-plane with each other.

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SHIPLAP! rant

A quick break from the DIY bar how-to:

-Please, god, please know that Joanna Gaines (who entirely deserves her empire as far as I’m concerned) did not invent shiplap. 

-Or pine.

-Or pine shiplap. It’s been around for a while. Just sayin’.

-I use it on my custom sheds, which my customers j’ adore.

I used it here (and my customer likes Chip and Joanna, so there you have it; bookmatch made in heaven) as cladding. 

To make the most of the material available at Lowe’s (8-foot lengths), I ran a vertical at the center of the bar, then ran horizontals out from it on each side.

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Final Backyard Bar Details

I used a Bosch 5-inch random orbit sander–awesome tool–to soothe the framing fury in the White Fir. I used 40-, 80-, 100-grit passes, which did the trick. 

After sanding, I eased the edge with the router and a nice Ogee profile.

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Then the bar top got its obligatory wipe down with my favorite finish of all time, boiled linseed oil.

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The last little doohickey on this backyard deck bar, a storage shelf for the bartender. I mean, you gotta keep the goods somewhere. A 2×4 cleat on the wing wall and a 2×4 cleat on the main wall with a 2×10 shelf so you’ve got a lifetime supply of supply storage.

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And theres the DIY bar

I think that’s all she wrote: How to build a bar. Now it’s time to trick out your bar to make it even more awesome.


About the Author

author avatar
Mark
Mark is a licensed contractor, tool expert, wood and outdoor enthusiast, and elite Spartan Race competitor. He writes about home improvement and tools for national magazines and websites, and teaches hands-on clinics for other remodeling professionals. Check out his book, The Carpenter's Notebook.

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