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Side-by-side comparison

4x6 ft Bench-Built Arbor Plan vs 4x4 ft Rose Garden Arbor Plan

A direct comparison of two free DIY plans from our library — cost, build time, footprint, materials, and which plan fits which yard.

If you have narrowed your shortlist to two specific designs, this is exactly the kind of decision where a side-by-side spec view saves a weekend of second-guessing. Both plans below are complete, code-aware DIY builds, but they differ on the things that matter for a backyard project — total cost, raw labor hours, footprint, and the wood species on the cut list.

Side-by-side specs

4x6 ft Bench-Built Arbor Plan4x4 ft Rose Garden Arbor Plan
CategoryArborsArbors
StyleBench-BuiltRose Garden
Footprint4x6 ft (24 sq ft)4x4 ft (16 sq ft)
Wood speciesWestern Red CedarComposite (Trex / Azek)
Roof finishasphalt architectural shinglesretractable canvas awning
DifficultyIntermediateIntermediate
Build time~52 hrs~24 hrs
Materials cost$400–$625$550–$875
Footing depth36″ × 2 posts36″ × 2 posts
Concrete4 × 60-lb bags4 × 60-lb bags
Cut-list items55
Build steps99

Cost & budget

The 4x6 ft Bench-Built Arbor Plan lands in the $400–$625 range for materials in Western Red Cedar, while the 4x4 ft Rose Garden Arbor Plan runs $550–$875 in Composite (Trex / Azek). The first plan is approximately 40% more expensive at typical 2026 lumber-yard pricing — driven mostly by the choice of Composite (Trex / Azek) over Western Red Cedar and the difference in cubic concrete volume between 2 and 2 footings.

Labor & difficulty

At ~52 hours, the 4x6 ft Bench-Built Arbor Plan is rated Intermediate. The 4x4 ft Rose Garden Arbor Plan takes ~24 hours and is rated Intermediate. The labor delta is roughly 28 hours, or one extra working day on the 4x6 ft Bench-Built Arbor Plan. Both plans require the same skill level, so the deciding factor is footprint and aesthetics rather than your comfort with carpentry.

Footprint & site fit

At 24 sq ft vs 16 sq ft, you are choosing between a focal-point garden structure and a focal-point garden structure. Allow at least 24 inches of clearance on every side for furniture and walking paths — that means the 4x6 ft Bench-Built Arbor Plan needs a clear area of approximately 8×10 ft and the 4x4 ft Rose Garden Arbor Plan needs 8×8 ft.

Material & durability

The 4x6 ft Bench-Built Arbor Plan is built from Western Red Cedar, while the 4x4 ft Rose Garden Arbor Plan calls for Composite (Trex / Azek). The species choice drives the cost delta and the maintenance schedule. Pressure-treated southern yellow pine is the cheapest and most rot-tolerant for in-ground posts; western red cedar is the DIY favorite for visible parts; redwood and white oak are heritage choices that command a premium.

Verdict

For a builder weighing these two specifically, 4x4 ft Rose Garden Arbor Plan is the faster build. If both fit your budget and yard, default to the design whose style language matches the rest of your house — a Craftsman bungalow looks awkward beside a modern slatted pergola, and vice versa.

Read each plan in full before committing: the complete 4x6 ft Bench-Built Arbor Plan page and the complete 4x4 ft Rose Garden Arbor Plan page. Both ship with full cut lists, hardware schedules, footing specs, and step-by-step build instructions.