Once I had the shape maped out, I then used the raising and lowering trick with the fence foundation to raise and lower the floors on the ends for the dance floors and to make a border outline for the fire pit.
If you want the bar and shelves to be against the walls, you have to put them in first before you add the walls. To do this, you have to add extra foundations behind them. After they are placed, remove the foundations behind them. This is the most time-consuming part of the build.
You can now start adding your walls and framing.
I now go inside and fill in the roof sides with square ceiling pieces above the front door and fire pit. I then fill in the slanted roof parts over the storage closets to give the inside a feel that you’re seeing the insides of the side room roof as one continuous flowing roof. I also replace the sandstone floors with nemedian floors.
To finish it off, I then placed walls around the vent flaps and purposefully left out the inside triangle caps to give a realistic feel to the place by making it look like the cross winds would blow through there and act like a suction to take out any smoke that had built up under the roof.
You can now decorate the place to your heart’s content.