Attaching Deck Ledgers Portland OR

It is common building practice to use flashing to keep moisture from getting between the house and the ledger. The Uniform Building Code requires flashing, and many contractors meet the requirement by installing an L-shaped piece of metal. The horizontal leg covers the top of the ledger and the vertical leg goes up the wall and is lapped by the building paper and siding above.

Local Companies

InterWorks, LLC
(503) 233-3500
P.O. Box 14764
Portland, OR
Kiewit-Bilfinger Berger
(503) 290-7000
211 S.E. Caruthers St., #200
Portland, OR
VS Tile & Marble
503-235-2777
1222 SE 7th AVE
Portland, OR
BPM Development
(503) 223-4128
610 SW Alder Street
Portland, OR
Fortis Construction Inc.
(503) 459-4477
1705 SW Taylor St
Portland, OR
R & H Construction
(503) 228-7177
1530 SW Taylor Street
Portland, OR
Hoffman Construction Company of Oregon
(503) 221-8811
805 SW Broadway Street
Portland, OR
Turner Construction
(503) 226-9825
1200 NW Naito Parkway
Portland, OR
Howard S. Wright Constructors
(503) 546-6180
425 NW 10th Avenue
Portland, OR
Tom Walsh & Co.
(503)9735001
1100 N.W. Glisan, #300
Portland, OR


It is common building practice to use flashing to keep moisture from getting between the house and the ledger. The Uniform Building Code requires flashing, and many contractors meet the requirement by installing an L-shaped piece of metal. The horizontal leg covers the top of the ledger and the vertical leg goes up the wall and is lapped by the building paper and siding above.

Most carpenters install the ledger in the same plane as the joists, so the deck surface ends up an inch or more higher than the horizontal leg of the flashing. This creates a perfect collection zone because if something falls in toward the house, the flashing will prevent it from falling through to the ground. If enough organic matter collects on the flashing, it can induce rot in the adjoining deck board or invade the siding above.

The simplest way to deal with this problem is to use a ledger that is taller than the joists and install it so the top edge will be in the same plane as the deck boards once those are installed.

You still need to flash the connection, but the flashing should come down the wall from behind the siding and building paper, run across the top of the ledger, and end in a lip that laps down the face (see illustration below). —Adapted from “Rot Resistant Deck Details,” by Kim Katwijk, which first appeared in the April 2005 issue ofThe Journal of Light Construction (www.jlconline.com), a sister publication to REMODELING.

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Debris-Free Ledger

 
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Featured Local Company

InterWorks, LLC

5032333500
P.O. Box 14764
Portland, OR

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