EZ PVC Bird House

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Intro: EZ PVC Bird House

My three year old daughter has a love for animals. After we found a birds nest in our yard and the eggs eaten by rodents, she decided that we should build them a house so that they were safe from the rats. Lily could not decide what shape she wanted to make the house, so she said we should make three, a circle, a square, and a triangle. Obviously a wood circle while doable, would be a little difficult for a three year old to help with so I came up with this design.

Materials:

1 x 6" piece of 4" diameter PVC

1 x 4" PVC end cap

1 x 4" PVC coupling

1 x 4" to 2" reducer bushing

2 x 3/16" diameter, 1" Length eye bolts w/ nuts

1 x 1' piece of small gauge chain

1 stick or dowel approximately 5/16" in diameter

(optional) PVC safe paint

Tools:

Hacksaw

Drill (3/16" bit and 5/16" bit)

Sand paper

Optional:

Lathe

Disclaimer: using power tools is inherently dangerous, please be sure to educate yourself on the dangers and proper methods for their use. Always wear proper safety equipment and be sure to keep your children safe as well. When using spray paint and other solvents, always work in a well ventilated area.

STEP 1: Cut the Flange Off of the Bushing

To allow for more interior room, and to make it possible to insert the bushing backwards with the ribbed side toward the interior of the house and make the exterior look a little cleaner.

We used a machinists lathe to take the thickness of the pipe bushing down to about 3/4".

The most important part of this process is the teaching aspect. Teaching the safe and proper way to use tools.

Do not stand in line with the material spinning on the lathe, wear your safety glasses and do not force the cutting tool.

The removal of the flange can be accomplished with a saw, but in our case, using a power saw is a little more dangerous for my daughter to help and using a hand powered hack saw is a little too tedious and likely to lose her interest. So when you throw all of that together, with the better finish created by the lathe, that made the decision for me.

STEP 2: Install the Back Wall of the House.

Install the cap on one end of the pipe segment. Using a rubber mallet allows for a complete installation without damaging the exterior surface of the house.

PVC cement is not required for this project. When assembling fittings of this size, the friction fit is enough to provide a secure attachment.

STEP 3: Install Front Door Frame.

Install the PVC coupling on the opposite end of the pipe segment. Invert the assembly onto a solid surface with the coupling facing down. This will allow you to use the rubber mallet on the pipe cap to assemble the coupling.

STEP 4: Install the Eye Bolts to Hang the House.

Using the 3/16" drill bit and drill (my "Lily size" 12V compact drill in this case), drill two holes on the same center line of the pipe, about an inch from the inside edge of the coupling and cap.

Install the eye bolts and nuts (nuts were supplied in the hardware pack from home depot). Tighten the bolts.

STEP 5: Install the Entrance Perch.

Drill a 5/16" hole in the bushing approximately a half inch below the entrance hole.

Using a piece of 5/16" dowel create and install the perch. My daughter decided to use a stick because that is what the birdies sit on when they are in the trees. We found a good size forked stick so the mommy and daddy bird would both have a place to sit. Using a carving knife we whittled the end of the stick down to the correct size to wedge into its mounting hole.

STEP 6: Install the Hanging Chain

Using a pair of pliers open a link at either end of the chain (or if you are using welded chain, install S hooks by bending the hook closed to the chain link). Insert the eye bolts into the open chain links and bend them back closed.

Now you are ready to hang the birdies' new home. Enjoy watching your new neighbors enjoying their new home!

10 Comments

My comment will be so wrong, but at first sight I thought of a huge fleshlight with balls holder..

This post starts off mentioning a three year old, and you thought it appropriate to make THIS comment?

You have the best helper ever there!

Nice instructable.

My Dad is an engineer and used to let me hang out in his workplace most weekends. He also provided me with rudimentary tools (hammer, saw, nails etc) from the age of about 8. I now love making and doing. I've installed a drop down ladder entrance in my attic, built a kitchen for my camper van, and built lots of planters and raised beds.
Women can be just as competent as men with respect to diy etc, they just need to be introduced to it at an early age so that when they later need a job doing they start thinking about how they might do it rather than reaching for the yellow pages.

tl:dr spot on, Dad, this is exactly what girls need exposing to in order to be adequately skilled young women. :)

Love that you let your daughter do what she safely can with the tools. She'll be a very capable young woman some day.

I also think it's great that you assembled without PVC glue. If the house doesn't get cleaned out every year, lice, mites and other bloodsuckers will make life miserable or even cause death to nestlings. In the early spring, before the birds set up housecleaning, pop the front out, clean and rinse out the insides, pop the front back on and you're ready for guests again. The only thing you may want to consider are adding some tiny drain holes in the bottom, both for ventilation and draining out any rain or condensation that might find it's way in.

Nice job to you and your girl.

You're a great dad.

Cool idea!

Looks like you had some great help there! Super cute. I hope those birds enjoy their new home!

That was adorable and informative. Cheers.