This Lattice-Panel Privacy Screen Trellise plan walks you through every cut, fastener, and footing for a 6x6-foot (36 sq ft) outdoor structure built from Redwood. The design balances the open, garden-room feeling of a traditional privacy-screen with the structural overbuild that lets it stand for two decades of weather without sagging beams or wobbling posts.
It is rated as a Intermediate-level project. Read through the full plan once before buying any lumber so you understand the order of operations — most failed DIY privacy-screen builds happen because rafters are cut before the beams are level, or because footings were poured without checking the diagonal of the layout. We solve both problems on day one.
Every dimension on the cut list assumes nominal lumber sizes (a "2x8" is actually 1-1/2" by 7-1/4") and standard 24-inch on-center rafter spacing, the same convention used in the International Residential Code for light-frame construction. If you live in a snow-load region above 30 psf or a coastal high-wind zone, upsize rafters to 2x10 and add a hurricane tie at every rafter-to-beam intersection.
You can build this Privacy Screen Trellise over a long weekend with one helper, or stretch it across three relaxed Saturdays if you are working solo. Either way, the result is a permanent backyard upgrade that adds resale value, defines outdoor living space, and gives climbing plants like wisteria, clematis, climbing hydrangea, or grapevine something to grow on.
At a glance
Dig to 36 inches OR 6 inches below your local frost line, whichever is greater. International Residential Code R403.1.4.1.
Materials cost estimate
This range reflects dimensional lumber, fasteners, concrete, and finish for the bare structure. It does not include site prep, electrical, lighting, or landscaping. Pressure-treated southern yellow pine generally lands at the low end of this range; western red cedar and Douglas fir at the middle; redwood, white oak, and composite framing at the high end.
Cut list
All dimensions are nominal lumber sizes. Add 6% to total board footage to cover off-cuts and the occasional bad board.
| Qty | Size | Length | Description / role |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | 4x4 | 8 ft | Redwood panel post Vertical posts on 4 ft centers, set in concrete |
| 72 | 1x4 | 6 ft | Redwood horizontal slat Spaced 1/2 inch apart for airflow with privacy |
| 6 | 2x4 | 6 ft | Redwood frame stile Vertical frame on each side of every panel |
| 3 | 4x4 | 2 ft | Redwood decorative post cap blank Routed top caps protect end-grain from rot |
Hardware schedule
- Galvanized lag screws (3/8" x 6") — box of 25
- Joist hangers (2x8 double) — each
- Post base brackets (6x6, galvanized) — each
- Hurricane rafter ties — each
- Carriage bolts (1/2" x 8") with nuts/washers — each
- Exterior wood glue (16 oz) — bottle
- Galvanized framing nails (16d, 5 lb box) — box
- Stainless steel pad eyes — each
Tools required
Comfortable with a circular saw, drill/driver, and level. Requires some compound cuts and lifting helpers.
- Tape measure (25 ft)
- Speed square
- Carpenter's pencil
- Cordless drill/driver
- Impact driver
- Circular saw
- 4-ft level
- 6-ft step ladder
- Safety glasses
- Work gloves
- Hearing protection
- Chalk line
- String line and stakes
- Miter saw (10" or 12" sliding)
- Reciprocating saw
- Router with roundover bit
- Post-hole digger or auger
- Wheelbarrow
- Mason's line
- Plumb bob
- Concrete mixing tub
- Rafter square
- Quick-grip clamps (4)
Step-by-step build instructions
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Layout and site preparation
Choose a level area at least 6 ft by 6 ft with 3 ft of clearance on every side. Drive a stake at each corner of the planned footprint and run mason's line between them. Square the layout by measuring diagonals — both should match within 1/4". Use spray paint or flour to mark each post location on the ground. Call 811 (or your local equivalent) at least 48 hours before digging to have buried utilities marked. Skipping the locate is the single most expensive shortcut a DIY builder can take.
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Dig and pour concrete footings
Dig post holes 12 inches in diameter and at least 36 inches deep — or 6 inches below your local frost line, whichever is greater. The IRC R403.1.4.1 frost-line rule is non-negotiable: a post above the frost line will heave a quarter inch every winter and rack the entire structure within five years. Add 4 inches of crushed gravel for drainage at the bottom of each hole. Mix concrete to a firm pancake-batter consistency and pour to within 2 inches of grade. Embed a galvanized post base bracket in each footing while the concrete is wet, leveling it to the string line. Allow 48 hours to cure.
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Cut and set the posts
Cross-cut each post to height — typically 8 ft for a standalone privacy-screen, 9 ft if attached to a house and you want headroom under a sloped roof, or 10-12 ft for a privacy-screen that needs to clear a doorway or accommodate climbing plants. Stand each post in its bracket, plumb in two directions with a 4-ft level, and brace temporarily with two 1x4 diagonal braces staked into the ground. Drive structural screws through the bracket flanges into the post.
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Verify level across the post tops
Before cutting any beams, check that the tops of all posts are within 1/8" of the same elevation. Use a 4-ft level laid across the longest pair, or a self-leveling laser if you own one. If a post is high, mark and cross-cut it in place with a reciprocating saw. Posts that are out of level produce visibly twisted rafters and a roof line that telegraphs the mistake from the street.
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Frame the panels
Build each frame as a rectangle of 2x4 stiles screwed at the corners. Square each frame by checking diagonals before adding any slats. Pre-paint or pre-stain every slat before assembly — once they are screwed up, you cannot reach the back faces.
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Attach the slats
Use a 1/2" plywood spacer to set the gap between every slat — set the spacer, position the slat, drive two screws into each end, remove the spacer, repeat. The consistent spacing is what separates a custom screen from a fence-grade panel. For wind-prone sites, leave a wider 3/4" gap to reduce sail load on the posts.
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Install post caps and trim details
Route a 1/4" roundover on each post-cap blank for a finished edge. Glue and brad-nail one cap to the top of each post — these protect the exposed end-grain, where rot starts on outdoor structures. Add any decorative corner braces (typically 4x4 stock cut at 45 degrees) at the post-to-beam junctions for both visual heft and lateral stiffness.
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Sand, finish, and seal
Sand all reachable surfaces with 80-grit followed by 120-grit. Knock down any framing-nail proud edges. Apply two coats of your chosen exterior finish, allowing the manufacturer's recommended dry time between coats. Pay extra attention to end grain and the bottoms of posts — these absorb the most water. Reapply finish every 2-3 years to keep the structure protected.
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Final inspection and landscaping
Walk the structure and re-check every fastener for full seating. Add planter boxes, climbing wires for vines, or string lights as desired. If your jurisdiction required a permit, schedule the final inspection. Photograph the build, note what you would change next time, and enjoy your new outdoor room.
Finish recommendation
For this build we recommend Cabot Australian Timber Oil. Apply two coats with a natural-bristle brush, allowing 24 hours between coats. Plan to refresh the finish every 2-3 years on horizontal surfaces (where water sits) and every 4-5 years on vertical surfaces.
Compare this plan
Trying to choose between two plans before you commit a weekend and a lumber order? Use a side-by-side spec comparison:
- 6x6 ft Lattice-Panel Privacy Screen Trellis Plan vs 6x6 ft Living Wall Planter Privacy Screen Trellis Plan
- 6x6 ft Lattice-Panel Privacy Screen Trellis Plan vs 6x6 ft Louvered Adjustable Privacy Screen Trellis Plan
- 6x6 ft Lattice-Panel Privacy Screen Trellis Plan vs 6x6 ft Hot Tub Surround Privacy Screen Trellis Plan
- 6x6 ft Lattice-Panel Privacy Screen Trellis Plan vs 4x6 ft Mid-Century Geometric Privacy Screen Trellis Plan
Related Privacy Screen Trellises
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