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30x40 shop

morrillm06

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Joined
Jul 21, 2015
Messages
106
Location
Moultonborough NH
Hello every one, this is my first post and it will probably be lengthy but please bear with me
I will be putting up a 30x40 shop/garage next spring and i cannot decide what route i want to go i know this has been discussed before on here but i would like to explain my ideas.

i will have 30x30 open work area with the back 10 feet being a compressor room and bathroom 7 foot ceilings in these rooms so i can have storage above them 12-14 foot ceilings have not decided yet. i would like to finish the inside of the garage with insulation and osb shething painted white for durability. this will primarily be used to build and work on oval track race cars (my families hobby)

I have looked into
Rhino steel buildings
Pole buildings
Stick built
socket system (timber frame)

I see positives and negatives with all the options but i want a building that is going to last longer than im am (im 27) we do have fairly severe winters in my area and code is 90 pound per square foot snow load (which drives the price of every kit up.

also i would prefer to build on top of 2 foot concrete stem walls to help keep the building weather tight.

What would you guys do?
THank you for taking the time to read this and this sight seems like a great resource.

-Matt
 
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Diesel Dan

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Jul 21, 2013
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2,459
Location
TN
8" concrete stem walls with staggered 2x4 wall construction.
Super quiet and insulated. Going with a staggered 2x4 wall will also keep the interior wall flush with no ledge from the blocks.
 

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morrillm06

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Jul 21, 2015
Messages
106
Location
Moultonborough NH
And I would love to go 30x48 but not sure if the budget, or the wife will allow , I mentioned 48 foot long once and she said that was "excessive" lol
 

Ironhorse74

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Nov 10, 2014
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998
Location
The Pacific North Wet
I wanted two ten foot wide doors on the 40 foot side of my 30 X 40. In those two bays they spaced the trusses at 12 foot. When I enquired why I was told they needed 12 foot for a 10 foot door and that 12 foot was normal spacing for trusses. Long story short, that is how my 30 X 40 became a 30 X 48.

Brad
 
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morrillm06

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Jul 21, 2015
Messages
106
Location
Moultonborough NH
Brad,
what framing method did you use for yours, that is the hardest decision for me to make as I see positives and negatives with all options
 

matt_i

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Mar 14, 2008
Messages
10,725
Location
SE Michigan
I feel like the all metal buildings are the best solution to cost and durability. There is nothing to rot, ever. However, they have an "agricultural look" to them, no offense to anyone who owns one.

If you go with pole or stick then you can do a different type of siding to make it look more like a building that goes with a residence. Not sure what type of area you are in. I think you can get more insulation thickness by choosing a 2x6 frame or working around the poles with insulation.
 

autonaut

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Joined
Mar 10, 2014
Messages
191
Bricks..

Have a mason help you build an insulated brick shop inside and outside. It will last longer than you or your family.

In europe people live in brick houses that are hundred years old and more.
 

rburke65

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Nov 10, 2007
Messages
12,349
Location
Canfield, Ohio
Hello and welcome from Ohio! My wife said the same thing about my "totally unnecessary" shop. But her car was the first on the lift and she is always parking her SUV under the porch when she takes the convertible. I should have added 2 more bays.....still might. I'm not taking it with me......Good luck.
 
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morrillm06

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Jul 21, 2015
Messages
106
Location
Moultonborough NH
Does anyone have any thoughts or experience with metal buildings, specifically Rhino. Their quote was very reasonable (17k) for a 30x40 fully insulated with all doors and windows except the overhead (10x10)
 

Diesel Dan

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Jul 21, 2013
Messages
2,459
Location
TN
For long term planning I'd much rather have a proper footer foundation, JMO.
Two courses of block above grade also helps keep pests out and protects the building incase something is pushed up against a wall.

My building was going to have a foundation but after months of contractors not calling me back I went with a pole building. It figures the day I poured all the post pads a block layer called me back.
 

marksland

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Nov 8, 2014
Messages
108
Location
Central Mass
I went back and forth between pole barn, metal building and stick built. In the end I decided on stick built with a full foundation, mostly because I could customize it to exactly what I wanted.
 
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morrillm06

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Jul 21, 2015
Messages
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Location
Moultonborough NH
The agricultural look does not bother me as I live out in the woods at the end of a 1 mile dead end dirt road so there is not traffic or neighbors to see it. the other plus about a metal building I see is I can go with a shorter building and have the same the same height in places I need it as a taller stick built because of the open ceiling.
 
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