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Side-by-side comparison

18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan vs 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan (Pressure-Treated Pine)

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

18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan (Pressure-Treated Pine)
CategoryPavilionsPavilions
StyleHip-RoofHip-Roof
Footprint18x24 ft (432 sq ft)18x24 ft (432 sq ft)
Wood speciesWestern Red CedarPressure-Treated Pine
Roof finishaluminum louvered systemtensioned 320-gsm shade sail fabric
DifficultyIntermediateAdvanced
Build time~51 hrs~158 hrs
Materials cost$21,850–$34,150$16,150–$25,250
Footing depth36″ × 6 posts36″ × 6 posts
Concrete12 × 60-lb bags12 × 60-lb bags
Cut-list items77
Build steps1212

Cost & budget

The 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan lands in the $21,850–$34,150 range for materials in Western Red Cedar, while the 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan (Pressure-Treated Pine) runs $16,150–$25,250 in Pressure-Treated Pine. The second plan is approximately 35% more expensive at typical 2026 lumber-yard pricing — driven mostly by the choice of Western Red Cedar over Pressure-Treated Pine and the difference in cubic concrete volume between 6 and 6 footings.

Labor & difficulty

At ~51 hours, the 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan is rated Intermediate. The 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan (Pressure-Treated Pine) takes ~158 hours and is rated Advanced. The labor delta is roughly 107 hours, or one extra working day on the 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan (Pressure-Treated Pine). If you are newer to outdoor woodworking, the 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan (Pressure-Treated Pine) is the safer pick — it uses simpler joinery and fewer compound cuts.

Footprint & site fit

At 432 sq ft vs 432 sq ft, you are choosing between a full outdoor room and a full outdoor room. Allow at least 24 inches of clearance on every side for furniture and walking paths — that means the 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan needs a clear area of approximately 22×28 ft and the 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan (Pressure-Treated Pine) needs 22×28 ft.

Material & durability

The 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan is built from Western Red Cedar, while the 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan (Pressure-Treated Pine) calls for Pressure-Treated Pine. 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, 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion 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 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan page and the complete 18x24 ft Hip-Roof Pavilion Plan (Pressure-Treated Pine) page. Both ship with full cut lists, hardware schedules, footing specs, and step-by-step build instructions.