2. The Plinth Foundation, Plinth and Brick Oven Floor

1 09 2008
The Completed Plinth

The Completed Plinth

Your plinth has two main functions.  Firstly, it raises your oven to a height that makes it practical to use.  Imagine trying to slide pizzas in and out of the oven on a baker’s peel if the entrance is at ankle level. You would end up with a bad back and a charred mess in the oven!  Secondly the top of the plinth forms the all important brick base to your oven.

Materials for plinth construction

Your choice of materials is dependant on personal taste, availability and budget.  If you scour around the Internet you will find plinths made from natural stone, bricks, cob, wood and earth and wood alone (like mine).  No one solution is better than the other so take your pick.  I am going to show you how to build a simple but beautiful plinth made from wood.  I was lucky enough to get hold of some oak beam off-cuts from a local timber merchant.  They are very attractive and very heavy!

Plinth Foundation Construction

If you are going to use a construction material with substantial weight from which to build your plinth and are building on soft ground you will need to establish a foundation first.  This is pretty easy.  In my case I dug a 40-50 cm deep hole slightly wider and longer than my intended plinth dimensions (120 Cm x 120 Cm) and filled it with hardcore (rubble) to a level just below the top of the hole.  I then topped this off with a layer of builders sand and finally laid a paving top onto the sand.  Continuing with the spirit of recycling, I managed to get hold of some broken slabs which I laid as crazy paving to form the flat level of my plinth foundation.  You can of course use other foundation methods such as concrete.  If you are lucky enough to have a chosen a location with a solid floor on which to build your oven then you can skip this step.

Plinth Construction

So you have a nice flat and solid base it is time to start building the plinth.  This is where building with timber comes into its own because it is just so simple!  Before you start building though you need to think about dimensions and this will involve a little forward planning. 

Plinth Dimensions

Plinth Dimensions

The plinth needs to be wide enough (and as your oven is going to be circular I suggest you make the plinth square) to accommodate all three layers of your oven.  The most important measurement is the diameter of the first layer – the inside of your oven.  You need to decide what is practical for your needs.  If you only ever intend to bake pizzas in it then it could be quite small but if you want to use it to roast legs of lamb or pork joints you need to make the oven layer wide enough in diameter to accommodate a roasting tin.  The internal diameter of my oven layer is 80cm which therefore means the brick floor on the top of my plinth is also 80cm x 80cm (you wouldn’t want any part of the wooden walls to be inside the oven when you fire it!).  Working out from here, each of the 3 layers should be approximately 7cm thick, so the total thickness of the oven walls Will be around 21cm.  Add this dimension to each side of your brick floor width and you will end up with the correct dimensions for your plinth.  Phew!  So my plinth top dimensions are 120cm x 120cm

Once you have your dimensions sorted, construction of the plinth is very easy.  Simply cut the timbers to the correct length, not forgetting to leave enough space for the overlapping end of each side.  Then build the sides up as if building a wall – overlapping the lengths of wood to add strength to the structure.  You shouldn’t need to use any “cement” between layers if you are using heavy timbers like mine.  Try to make the top layer as level as possible as this will help when trying to level the brick oven floor.  I used four internal corner angle brackets on each layer in order to prevent the structure from moving out of shape.

Plinth part-filled with rubble showing internal structure and angle brackets.

Plinth part-filled with rubble showing internal structure and angle brackets.

Your next task is to fill the plinth “box” with rubble (hardcore) to a level of about 30-40 Cm’s below the top. 

After this stage I decided to add a layer of builders sand followed by a layer of glass bottles (whole with tops removed).  My reason for doing this is that the glass bottles should provide an extra layer of insulation and retain heat below the brick floor of the oven.  I have no idea if this actually works but I had loads of bottles lying around so thought I’d give it a whirl!

Finally add another layer of sand up to a depth below the surface of exactly one brick deep.

Brick Oven Floor Construction

This is the last stage in construction of your plinth.  The brick floor is obviously a critical component of your oven so I suggest you take your time with this and do it right. 

You’ll need some bricks, something to cut them with and some more builders sand.  I used bog-standard London bricks and a hammer and bolster to cut the bricks (although I’m not very good at this and broke quite a few!).  Use any bricks you can get your hands on but try and look for ones with a nice flat surface, without cracks and any that look too porous.  Bricks with hairline cracks will break when you come to cut them or later when they are fired in the oven.

Laying the brick oven floor.

Laying the brick oven floor.

All you need to do then is fill the top layer of your plinth with bricks.  I chose to use a herringbone pattern which holds together nicely without cement.  Remember to try and make the oven floor as level as possible. 

Once you have laid all of the bricks in place brush handfuls of building sand into any gaps to prevent any further movement of the bricks.

That’s it!  Your plinth is complete and ready for the next stage – building the oven!


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37 responses

24 03 2009
Helen

Hi Simon,
Thanks for sharing your experience with the word via this blog, its great!
Just to let you know I sell clay here in Norfolk & if I can help anyone in this region with thier clay requirements they can look me up on the ‘net. Find me at http://www.angliaclaysupplies.co.uk. Im now building my own oven. Well-with all this clay who could resist?
Helen.

22 03 2009
Nic

Hi simon,
I emailed a potters in fordingbridge, they said to me i needed a clay with a good amount of grog or molochite in, this helps give it strength for such a large item. They also suggest either P1480 Earthstone Handbuild clay or the P1484 Earthstone Crank clay (both have 20% coarse). The Handbuild clay starts at £11.39 per 12.5kg bag and the crank starts at £6.96 per 12.5 kg bag. Clay is sold on a sliding scale so the more you buy in one go the base price goes down. in another email to me they said it looks like a teracotta clay B103 grogged terracotta wold be good and i could use less sand as there is already 10% grog added to the clay, they think a oven the size of yours would take 3 or 4 12.5kg bags at a cost of £22.54. The shop http://www.briarwheels.co.uk are very impressed with your link and are telling people about it.
As you have made the oven already im gonna stick with what you suggest. If i cant find it for free then which would you buy?
Also i have work mates from Pompey, they said its very clay like there, do you know if people can just start digging up the ground by roads etc.
People are having a laugh when i tell them im making a clay oven but have no clay (the main ingredient). The base is done so ready for clay.
Thaks again si
Nic

22 03 2009
Simon

I know nothing about potters clay so I’d go with whatever the experts recommend. Fabulous comment though Nic. If it’s ok with you I’ll add much of that to my FAQ on clay. I wouldn’t recommend digging in the street in Pompey though! I’m afraid I don’t know of a clay source in Portsmouth itself. Maybe you could contact the Geology department at the University of Portsmouth and see if they might be able to help?

I love the fact you are building your oven without having any clay. It reminds of the bloke who sold his TV to buy a DVD player!

Good luck Nic.

Simon

21 03 2009
Sam

I feel very silly asking this but am drawing a blank – where can I get me some CLAY?! I feel a bit uncomfortable going and digging some up from someones field, and anyway, I live in an upland granite area in the middle of France, no clay for miles! I’m coming back to the UK with a big vehicle next week and I’ve checked the Jewsons and Wickes websites…nowt. When you’ve all had a laugh, can someone make any helpful suggestions? I’ve got all my other components, and have found this forum very helpful, thanks Simon.

22 03 2009
Simon

Hi Sam see Nic’s comment below!

14 03 2009
Nic

Hi Simon.
I have just started building a clay oven, copying your step by step guide.
My uncle has given me loads of those heat retaining blocks from storage heaters. Do you think these will be ok to use on the oven floor. I built a fire on them last night and they didn’t break but just wondered what you thought.
Also I’m having trouble getting hold of clay. I can buy it from fordingbridge but it’s alot of money. I live in Andover, 35 mins from petersfield. Andover is very chalky. Any ideas bud?
Your a good man helping out everyone.
Thankyou
Nic

14 03 2009
Simon

Hi Nic I think those blocks will be absolutely fine just be sure they are not asbestos or asbestos based! If you can make a nice flat surface out of them then by all means use them. I asked around for my clay and “discovered” some that a farmer had dug out of his field. I also live in the South Downs so we also have chalk escarpments here. You need to look for low land areas – there you will find the clay. Do you know of any local gravel works? They will have lots of waste clay around if you do. Good luck with it anyway.

All the best

Simon

13 03 2009
Jake

Hi Simon,

The oven looks great, I’m already planning mine for my new house. I was very excited by your oak beam design until I saw how much oak beams cost! I’m also Hampshire based, can you tell me your source for beams and how much I should expect to pay?

Thanks,

Jake

14 03 2009
Simon

Hi Jake thanks for the comments. I stumbled luckily on the oak beams at a small, local timber yard in Milland. They were reclaimed offcuts. I think I paid around £180 for mine. You can always look at alternatives such as new sleepers which you can get from larger Garden Centres. Drive around a few timber yards though and see what you find – you might get a bargain!

Best of luck

Simon

9 03 2009
Mick

Hi Simon,

Thanks for sharing this – a really good explanation and just what I needed before starting my own attempt. Does the heat of the oven not cause the wood at the top of the plinth to burn as it looks to be very close to the inside of the oven layer?

Mick

9 03 2009
Simon

Hi Mick thanks for the kind comments. You do get a little scorching but only at the oven entrance. This would be easily remedied by putting a heat proof tile in the entrance.

All the best

Simon

22 02 2009
Andrew

Hi Simon
Could you please tell me if breeze blocks would be suitable for building the plinth?
Thanks for your help

23 02 2009
Simon

Hi Andrew breeze blocks would be absolutely fine. If you were really clever you could even build a wood store underneath!

Good luck

Simon

17 02 2009
Simon

The red clay sounds perfect Ryan. Don’t forget the sand though!

Good luck

Simon

17 02 2009
ryan

I’m actually in Georgia (USA). We have a lot of red clay here that the Cherokee and Creek indians used for pottery and clay ovens. It’s readily available in my yard ;)

Hopefully it will work!

9 02 2009
senayit

hay some body i need arctctheral design

9 02 2009
Simon

Errrr..pardon?!

Simon

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