lutt
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2010
- Messages
- 661
- Location
- Pocahontas, Arkansas
- Tractor
- Kubota ZG 22, John Deere 4200 4wd/ 420 loader, 4 wd,08 polaris 700 ranger crew
That's funny! Lol LUTT
Has anyone here ever finished a portable building for a living space, or ie economical cabin? Mother passed in the spring and left me some property where I do all of my hunting and fishing in that area! I'm looking at a company here in Arkansas, bald eagle barns, I've had one if there buildings before and they are top quality! I'm needing some ideas on finishing as far as shower, sleeping area, kitchen/ lounge. The building I'm looking at is simply called the cabin, 14x24. Has 20 feet of usable space and 4 feet of porch. I will be staying there a lot! It's in the same area where I work on the row crop farm on my months that I'm off work. I want it comfortable and efficient! I live about thirty miles from there and hate having to drive back and forth during our busy seasons! Sorry for the lengthy thread starter, I want you guys opinions and pics if you guys have them! I will try to post pics later of the building, you can google them, they have a nice website! Thanks LUTT
Nice looking building, but those French doors are going to struggle with the weather without a porch to protect them. Doors do not do well without protection, and French doors need it more then regular doors.
Eddie
Eddie, I'm starting to think about that, our humidity here is always 95 percent or better in the summer! The buildings I was looking at are kinda high, a 14 x 24 is 6495 delivered, I'm thinking I can pour a slab and frame it up a lot cheaper! I've been toying with the layout of a that paticular building and really having a hard time making it fit, I think I would be better off to frame up a 24x24 and do it right the first time! Your right on the moisture, I figure she would rot from the ground up. I m thinking about scrubbing this idea! Too much money in the long term and I've got the money to do it right, and with the salvage materials I won't be much out of pocket finishing it and furnishing, just money on electrical wiring, plumbing, an insulation, I started doing the math this morning and it really don't add up on the portable! Thankyou for the heads up Eddie, I'm gonna figure up a 24 x 30 and a 30 x 30, believe I will get more for my money with it on a slab! THANKS LUTTHow much does the 14x24 foot portable building cost? Do these dimensions include the porch? At 336 sq ft, it's a tiny space to want to invest in, and probably not something you'd want long term. I would think 500 to 600 sq ft would be a minimum for a one bedroom cabin. Probably add a loft to it for guests. Have you looked online for floor plans for small cabins? One of the big drawbacks to portable buildings is that they don't have a foundation, they just sit on blocks or wooden skids. If you put a layer of gravel down, you can prolong the life of the skids for awhile, but if Arkansas has humidity anything like East Texas, then it's just a matter of time until the wood begins to rot. Do you have wasps? mice? snakes? ants? or other undesirable critters that you don't want to start to live and even die under your cabin? If this is something you want to enjoy long term, then I would strongly suggest pouring a concrete slab foundation and stick framing it up from there. You could easily side it in wood that looks like a log cabin, or if you don't want to maintain it and just paint it once and be done with it, Hardie lap siding is easy and affordable. Put a quality shingle or metal roof on it and be done with it. There is no such thing as a well built portable building. The cut corners worse then any mobile home. Stud spacing, lack of headers, cheap roofing materials, small nails, undersized lumber for rafters and joists. For what you pay to buy one and have it delivered, I guarantee you that you can build a stick frame building on a cement slab for less if you do it yourself!!! Eddie