Shed or Pole barn options

   / Shed or Pole barn options #1  

paulsharvey

Elite Member
Joined
Jan 21, 2016
Messages
4,816
Location
Hawthorne, Fl
Tractor
Kioti CK2610 HST
Me and the wife have been thinking of buying or building some decent shed space. I currently have a 12x16 ft 3 walled shed, with dirt floor that I use. My plan is tractor and mower will live in it. The new shed/barn would be for tools, storage, possibly small work shop, maybe reloading bench. I've seen some pretty affordable 14x30 ft kits from Lowes/HD places, but they have bad reviews.

I'm on 2 acres, but I'm pretty restricted on where I can put the shed.

I would Like concrete floor. Will probably insulate and plywood/peg board interior. I want at least one large door, 6 ft wide at least, but could be barn door, roll up, large single, ect.

I don't want to consider anything over a max total of $8000.

Building permits needed in Florida? Typically a 'Shed' does not need one I think, they are 'temporary'. I am zoned Ag, but I'm not a 'bonafide agricultural property'.

I would like to add power but I don't mind doing that after it's installed to avoid building permit issues.

Does anyone have experience with Pole barn kits?
Assemble your self kits from box store?
Professional installed kits?
 
   / Shed or Pole barn options #2  
A concrete floor puts in the “real building” zone. I haven’t seen one of those that is movable.
In Florida I’d skip the pole barn and do a slab with a little footing around the edge in a monolithic pour. Concrete is going to eat your budget quickly though!
After the slab and footings, a simple 2x4 framed building with something like T1-11 that would be siding and sheer would be cheapest. Hand frame a little roof and throw up some Comp shingles.

$8000? Maybe. You do the work and concrete, doors and windows in your area doesn’t break the bank. The rest of the materials will be under $1000.

This would get you “dried in”. The electrical, insulation and drywall could come with time and money.
 
   / Shed or Pole barn options #3  
How old are you and how would you describe your physical fitness? Are you comfortable working on a ladder?

Pole barns are the easiest type of building to create. For most sizes, a small crew can have it done in just a few days. I've never worked with a kit, so I can't comment on them. But if you want to pick out your lumber, and get the straightest boards available, it's a simple enough thing to do yourself.

24x48 with 12 foot walls is a very doable sized building for your budget. Set 6x6 posts every 8 feet, install your wall purlins every four feet up, and then rest your trusses on top of your posts. Leave a 10x10 foot opening for a roll up door, and another 3 foot opening for a walk through door. Set your purlins on your trusses, and then cover it all in metal. Any metal building supplier will cut the metal to fit. I'm buying 16ft 2in long R panels for my new porch so I have a nice overhang into my gutters.
 
   / Shed or Pole barn options #4  
I follow barn/shed posts closely, having lost our barn some years ago to a tree (will be making do w/ shipping container for a while). Just a thought on concrete slab vs none, I would look at the various plastic geo-grid type products that are laid down on well tamped earth with a weed barrier and filled with gravel. They create a durable and tight surface (wheelchair compliant I understand) and can support great weight depending on thickness or type. Here is an example: geo grid new 1 – Standartpark
 
   / Shed or Pole barn options #5  
We put in a 20x22' metal building w/2 roll-up garage doors a couple of years back on a concrete slab. The building was done by Carolina Carports & was close to $6K with NC tax. That included the vertical run roof, 12 gauge tube, 2 garage doors & 6 windows. The slab & footings was about $2500, with me doing a lot of the site prep & digging for the footings but a contractor doing forms, pour & finish. Permits & inspections ran another $250, as memory serves.
 
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   / Shed or Pole barn options
  • Thread Starter
#6  
I'm capable of doing the work, but I've heard hear stories about the 'quansit' hut style being a huge pain in the butt, and taking 4 or 5 guys to erect.

Right now I'm trying to feel our what I want, rough price ideas, permitting requirements, ect. I certainly haven't ruled out a pole part type, but would probably order the steel pre-fab trusses over conventional framed roof.

I would like 12 ft exterior walls, but I'm not sure that 8ft wouldn't work for my needs. Kinda depends on price difference and construction type.
 
   / Shed or Pole barn options #8  
8ft walls severely limits your overhead door height. You'll end up with a 7' door which really sucks.

The building Eddie described is very easy to construct. You could shorten it to 10ft and save some cost. But again, you start limiting door height.

Menards has a "build your own" feature on their website. Check it out. It'll spec the building along with prices. Whether you buy from them or not is your choice. Very handy tool for brainstorming.
 
   / Shed or Pole barn options #9  
I'm capable of doing the work, but I've heard hear stories about the 'quansit' hut style being a huge pain in the butt, and taking 4 or 5 guys to erect.

Right now I'm trying to feel our what I want, rough price ideas, permitting requirements, ect. I certainly haven't ruled out a pole part type, but would probably order the steel pre-fab trusses over conventional framed roof.

I would like 12 ft exterior walls, but I'm not sure that 8ft wouldn't work for my needs. Kinda depends on price difference and construction type.

The Carolina Carports barns that were mentioned are not a quonset hut, they are a pole barn, but they are framed with steel square tubes rather than with wood. They are available in most any size you can think of. We were looking at them when we were getting quotes to build our pole barn.
If you go to their website, they have their price lists their which cover most any option you could think of.

Aaron Z
 
   / Shed or Pole barn options
  • Thread Starter
#10  
The Carolina Carports barns that were mentioned are not a quonset hut, they are a pole barn, but they are framed with steel square tubes rather than with wood. They are available in most any size you can think of. We were looking at them when we were getting quotes to build our pole barn.
If you go to their website, they have their price lists their which cover most any option you could think of.

Aaron Z
When I check their website they can't build theirs in Florida or California
 

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