WVBill
Veteran Member
I'm getting ready to design/build a small 20 X 20 foot building as a quilting studio for my wife. the enclosed floor area needs to be a free span with no internal supporting posts/walls. I live in the northern Shenandoah valley and will want to insulate/heat the building for winter use.
My foundation/floor choices (and some of my concerns) seem to be:
1) Concrete footers/concrete slab floor - (concrete floor would be uncomfortable and cold in winter) (?)
2) post-and-beam foundation with insulation between above-grade engineered lumber floor joists - (how to keep "critters" from taking up residence under the building)
3) pole building type foundation with concrete slab floor - (same concern as #1)
4) pole building with insulation between above-grade engineered lumber floor joists. (same concern as #3)
I will be building this myself with my son in law's help and don't want to break the bank doing it. I think #2 is my preferred approach except the building will be less than 50 feet from a 200 year old rock wall and a sometimes corn field on the other side meaning we have lots of squirrles, skunks and woodchucks who will be more than happy to take up sheltered residence under the building. If I keep my floor joists 6" up off the surface grade and fill that 6" gap with crusher run topped by heavy plastic sheeting do you think that will be enough to deter the critters? Any other ideas?
Oh - I plan to have a gambrel roof with a loft in the upstairs area.
Thanks
WVBill
My foundation/floor choices (and some of my concerns) seem to be:
1) Concrete footers/concrete slab floor - (concrete floor would be uncomfortable and cold in winter) (?)
2) post-and-beam foundation with insulation between above-grade engineered lumber floor joists - (how to keep "critters" from taking up residence under the building)
3) pole building type foundation with concrete slab floor - (same concern as #1)
4) pole building with insulation between above-grade engineered lumber floor joists. (same concern as #3)
I will be building this myself with my son in law's help and don't want to break the bank doing it. I think #2 is my preferred approach except the building will be less than 50 feet from a 200 year old rock wall and a sometimes corn field on the other side meaning we have lots of squirrles, skunks and woodchucks who will be more than happy to take up sheltered residence under the building. If I keep my floor joists 6" up off the surface grade and fill that 6" gap with crusher run topped by heavy plastic sheeting do you think that will be enough to deter the critters? Any other ideas?
Oh - I plan to have a gambrel roof with a loft in the upstairs area.
Thanks
WVBill