Bird houses from reclaimed wood

The right size matters! Discover ideal bird house dimensions, which wood to use, key construction tips, how many to hang, and perfect placement spots.

Eoncrafts: typical standard dimensions of bird houses in Poland according to the Polish national forest service.
As recommended by the Polish national forest service

The house should be built from solid, preferably untreated, wood (2–2.5 cm thick) and assembled with care to ensure weather-tightness. Use wide boards for the side panels to minimize joints and prevent gaps that could compromise long-term water resistance. A proven, standardized construction method—refined over years of use—exists. I chose not to deviate from it.

Some birds will not occupy a bird house which hangs too close to another one that is already occupied and other birds don’t seem to mind having neighbours nearby. Not knowing exactly which birds live in the neighbourhood, I decided to put up 4 bird houses, on each side of our house.

  • Protected from midday sun.
  • Turned away from the prevailing rain direction.
  • Tilt slightly forward to prevent water entry.
  • Have some bushes or trees in the neighbourhoodMount 3+ meters high, away from streets and foot traffic

A lot of drawings can be found online and they are all very similar as most of them start from the standards available. I took the one which I found on the website above and adjusted the dimensions a little bit to suit the thickness and length of the boards that I had.

Eoncrafts: Cut plan for a bird house type A/A1 from Ptasie Strefa
Ptasie Strefa

I quickly calculated that I would be able to make 4 bird houses from the boards that I had selected. So I started cutting the boards. Unfortunately I mixed up the visualization of the houses that I had in my head prior to cutting and I swapped the wider boards for front and rear with the narrower boards for the sides… I only discovered my error when I was near the end of cutting all of them so not really possible anymore to correct my error. So my houses will not be following the standard assembly where the narrower side panels are between the wider front and rear panels but the other way around.

One could argue that because of my error, my houses will be less weathertight. Fair enough. So I will not elaborate on the detailed assembly of the houses I made. But, as my houses will be hanging under a roof overhang I am not worried about weather-tightness and decided to continue building anyhow. Two of the houses I was able to improve with some wide board leftovers.

I assembled the houses with a mix of 4mm wood screws (30, 40, 50mm long)

Eoncrafts: 4 bird houses type A made from reclaimed wood.
My quartet of bird houses: the side two have narrower fronts due to my cutting mix-up, but they’re still cozy!

I hung the houses in the autumn. Next autumn I will evaluate if they have been occupied and whether modifications/improvements will be necessary. Stay tuned!

Eoncrafts: A narrow front bird house under roof overhang.
One of the houses with narrower front.
Eoncrafts: Another narrow front bird house
The second house with the narrower front
Eoncrafts: standard wide front bird house in a more exposed location.
I hung both improved houses in the more exposed locations.

If you want to learn some more about the birds around us and how you can help them, I couldn’t recommend more the Ptasie Strefa website and Youtube channel (But you will have to learn a little Polish 😊)

https://ptasiastrefa.pl

https://www.youtube.com/@ptasiastrefa

https://www.facebook.com/ptasiastrefapl

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