This is how I invisioned my backyard with the completed structure:
When I took my plans to city planning, I was surprised to learn that I didn't need any permits because it wasn't connected to our house and it was too small in size to be considered a garage.
After getting a "post and pole" permit, summer 2006 found me in a old burn (forest fire) area felling charred timbers which would make the skeleton for my structure.
By the end of the summer 2006, this was what my structure looked like:
I pulled this all back down, stained the logs and covered them with tarp for the winter.
When spring came, work began in earnest and generally consumed my whole summer. Check it!
I'm sorry there is no old shed demolition video. Ask my wife, it was pretty entertaining!
I recycled the floor, roof, two by four and plywood of the old shed.
Old Shed Floor in New Shed
Roof and Plywood from Old Shed on New Shed
When working on this kind of project it's very handy to have a wood pimp. A wood pimp is a friend who happens to have a small scale wood mill in his yard. Old barn wood, lumber for trusses, sheet metal roof, tongue and groove decking plus lots more wood all came from my buddy Jer's place. If you think this little structure is neat, you should see the awesome timber frame home he's built for his family. Besides lots and lots of wood at discount prices he was also there to answer any structural questions I had. Very handy indeed!
Trusses
So this it pretty much how it looks now. Next summer, I'll to build the living roof and build windows to go inside the trusses and it'll be 100% complete.