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building pole barn on unlevel ground?

bobby5

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Sep 7, 2010
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16
Im having a 30x40 pole barn built in the next month and had a question. Where im building the pole barn it isnt level its about 3 or 4 feet off level at one end of it. I know with a stick built garage they would just block it up and back fill gravel. What do you do with a pole barn. A couple people told me they have longer poles at that end and use treated boards and then backfill it with gravel. I really dont want any boards showing. What is the neatest and cleanest looking way to go about this?

Thanks
 
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trbomax

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starvation lake,mi.
I filled and graded level my site before setting posts,but it was only about 18" low in one corner. Remember that the post footings must rest on virgin (undisturbed) soil , not fill of any kind. The distance below grade that the footing sets may pass thru compacted fill,but if it rests on virgin soil,you are good.Grade it back about 10 ft or so at a min slope of 1/12 from the underside edge of your floor surface. Better yet ,dig a moat all around the slab about 12" deep and 15' out. Fill it with a 50/50 mix of peastone and drain rock ,then grade that back as outlined above, This is what I am doing,but iVe fallen behind the fight. Got the moat dug last fall,but still no stone! Snakes and frogs like it though.
 

larry_g

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oregon
Grade it back about 10 ft or so at a min slope of 1/12 from the underside edge of your floor surface. Better yet ,dig a moat all around the slab about 12" deep and 15' out. Fill it with a 50/50 mix of peastone and drain rock ,then grade that back as outlined above, .

I concur mostly. I dug out about 6-8' extra around the back of the building which was up against the bank. In my old building I put in a retaining wall that was 2 or 3 2x12's high with rock and drain pipe. On the top of the slope I planted ivy to help retain the soil. Had a built in dog run.

The new shop I have tapered back a bit more like Turbomax and will not be using the retaining wall. I still have the rock and drain tile.

How far you have to dig back and what slope will be somewhat determined by soil type that you have to work with.

lg
no neat sig line
 

Kev442

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Wi
On the backside of mine, it was about 2' off. I simply dug all the posts in to match each other, with the backside only needing to be dug 2' instead of 4'. I then backfilled evenly and voila, everything was "dug" 4' deep.

Sounds like all you need to do is set the posts up on their concrete pads and backfill.
 

larry_g

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oregon
After reading the answers I think there are two trains of thought going here. One is to excavate the high ground to get a level building spot, and the other is to build up the low spot with fill. So Bobby can you clear up your question a bit? Are you excavating or filling? In my county poles are required to be 4' below grade, which is undisturbed soil, not fill. I failed an inspection on the holes and Kev442 would have failed here also. I'm not saying Kev is wrong, just this county's code.

lg
no neat sig line
 
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rodnok1

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Jan 27, 2005
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NC
I agree with back filling and using longer poles to reach undisturbed ground. I had to fill one corner about a foot or so and just used one longer post on the corner. Then sloped the ground away from the building.
Where are you located?
 

1320stang

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Edmond, OK
Remember that the post footings must rest on virgin (undisturbed) soil , not fill of any kind.

That's why I was suggesting backfilling after the poles are set. He didn't indicate that he was on a slope (i.e. that there is ANY high ground that he can cut into) so I didn't recommend doing any cutting. Depending on the room you have, a lot of times there isn't enough and when you cut and fill, you end up with two retaining walls, one above and one below, and that adds a lot of expense. I like the 1/12 taper away from the building if you have the room. :beer:
 

haugy

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Nashville, TN
I just did this with my 30x40 pole barn. I took the top layer of dirt off. Then took measurements as to where the bottom of the shop floor would be when I built it up. I didnt go down because I wanted to make sure it was above grade for water runoff. I'm not on a slope, but there is a slight flow of water, and it would have been right at the shop. So I built it up.

I called the pole barn company and told them my measurements, and they just made the poles longer. They came out, and set the poles in virgin ground with no fill dirt. The city did their inspection of the poles, and I proceded.

I then built up the area for concrete with gravel. 4 truckloads worth. It was alot. After that was compacted, concrete was poured. It was poured with a turn-down edge. They allowed a layer of concrete to flow down the sides of the built up area. This not only contains the gravel, but cleans it up nicely and looks like a built wall. And then the pole barn crew came and put the steel siding on the shop.

This did put my shop up about 18-20 inches at the farthest point. So I had to build a driveway and concrete it before I could use it at all. Since I wanted that, I was okay with it. But keep that in mind if you build up, can you get in it when it's done?
 

Kev442

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After reading the answers I think there are two trains of thought going here. One is to excavate the high ground to get a level building spot, and the other is to build up the low spot with fill. So Bobby can you clear up your question a bit? Are you excavating or filling? In my county poles are required to be 4' below grade, which is undisturbed soil, not fill. I failed an inspection on the holes and Kev442 would have failed here also. I'm not saying Kev is wrong, just this county's code.

lg
no neat sig line

The reason I was able to do this is because the backfill is called "pit run" around here. When it solidifies, it is akin to concrete, much stronger than the regular mush they call soil around here.:)
I also watered it and drove on it to compact it prior to concrete, no concrete settling in my future!
 

larry_g

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oregon
The reason I was able to do this is because the backfill is called "pit run" around here. When it solidifies, it is akin to concrete, much stronger than the regular mush they call soil around here.:)
I also watered it and drove on it to compact it prior to concrete, no concrete settling in my future!

I wish that I could have gotten away with that. Here they inspect the holes and the bottom of the hole has to be 4' below undisturbed soil. It doesnt matter if the fill and concrete surround the pole above grade. Hopefully the OP will understand what is required in his jurisdiction before he makes a mistake like I did.

lg
no neat sig line
 
OP
B

bobby5

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Sep 7, 2010
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I just took a transit and measured to see how off level i was. The back corner is 5' low. Is a pole barn doable with it being this low?
 

dreamingmuscle

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Tryon Oklahoma
Every thing is doable. Just depends on how much work you want to put out.

How much land are you dealing with here anyway? I asks this because a 1 acre plot is different then a 10 acre plot. 10 acres just move the dirt until it's level. With 1 acre your going to have to move some dirt in and build retaining walls.
________
mflb
 
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Shadowdog500

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Down the shore
Talk to the people building the pole barn and find out how they want the site prepared. When I signed the contract to have my Morton building put up, they had very specific instructions on how I was to prepare the site, and even provided me a book that told exactly what needed to be done for a bunch of situations.

Im sure your manufacturer has something similar.

Chris
 

Red05GT

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Mar 29, 2010
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ohio
Whether you build a pole structure or one on a foundation, 5 feet of site slope will have
to be addressed with fill. Either one can be done. Site size and setbacks will affect
possible outcomes. Just don't set the building too low to save on fill and construction
cost, only to have water running in your door after completion.
 

tshort

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Jan 7, 2012
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Ok. I have a question to add. My husband and I did this too, however we have already built the barn. NOW we have to fix the problem. We were unaware of all of this and though it would be okay to built it like so.
The builder built the barn and the tin was place to the bottom purlin, which is level BUT 19- 25 inches off the ground in some places. So for looks sake my husband and I attached more tin to the bottom. Now we need to somehow get the inside more level to build a storage room.
I had some suggest placing cinder blocks around the inside perimeter and then filling those with rebar and concrete. (make a barrier to hold in the gravel) Then back filling with gravel etc.
We would also have to build a ramp to get into the barn.
How does this sound and what about laying the blocks on unlevel ground? Is this going to work or cause more problems.
 

mad57

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Jan 30, 2009
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Mine was no where near 5ft but more like 6 to 8 inchs lower in one corner, we filled the ground way before i built and let a bunch of natural rains pack the ground, when it came time to build i was almost dead on the money, worst case was some areas had more crete here or there in my 30x80.
 

george p

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Apr 19, 2015
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I would love to see pictures of this shop. It would really help me with my own project!!
 

Domn8r

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Jan 4, 2010
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Location
Helena, MO
My 30x30 was 3 ft off level. On the high side a foundation was poured and poles were anchored on top. the florr was then dug down to the low side height with the poles on the lower end set as they normally would have been.
 

RPH

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Dec 17, 2006
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Michigan Thumb
30x72', east end required about 6' of fill tapering to about 18" high at west end. Fill is 50' feet wide and length about 100'. Was still required to reach virgin soil and bottom 18" had to bell out to 20". Longer poles were supplied for the deep holes. One this I spec' was barn to be dry inside hence the 18" high at the west end. Pain in the **** to bore the deep holes but it's doable. And it's bone dry inside.
 

shadyluke

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Oct 3, 2014
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SE Pa
I had the exact situation. I dug down on one end and built a retaining wall. I still had to fill some on the other side but I didn't want my building sticking that far out of the ground at one end. It worked really well for me. Take a look at my build thread.
 

billgreenwood

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Dec 4, 2014
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Location
Copperas Cove, TX
I am in the process of getting my build going and mine is similar to yours. I had an 18" drop from the high corner to the opposite corner as well as very hard packed soil with huge rocks buried. I will be putting up a pole barn with non-traditional pole placement. Due to the soil and rocks it was recommended by a Morton rep to put a slab in and then attach the poles to the top of the slab using brackets designed for just this application. I got with a highly recommended concrete crew in my area and they went to work on it. They brought in 3 tri axle dump trucks of crushed rock for fill and compacted it. Then they dug a 12x12 footer and poured the slab for my building. With the exception of part of the high side footer most of the concrete is above grade.

Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk
 

rburke65

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Nov 10, 2007
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Canfield, Ohio
I know it's an old thread and everyone wants to save a buck then they have problems. But this is why you start with shooting with a laser, find how much your footprint is out of level, determine your floor level.....you want it higher than the flood water level!...... Then ya need an excavator to remove the top soil, build up the garage foot print, start thinking about drainage. But these should be done before the dig/drill o hole for the first post.
 

theoldwizard1

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SE MI
Where im building the pole barn it isnt level its about 3 or 4 feet off level ... A couple people told me they have longer poles at that end and use treated boards and then backfill it with gravel.

That is guaranteed to fail ! Only a mater of time.

You need to build a retaining wall. It should be at least 12" higher than the highest point of the current area where you plan on locating the pole barn.

This is going to cost some serious money ! You need to trench down to below the frost line and pour a concrete footing. Make sure there is rebar in the footing and pieces pointing up to connect to the blocks. As you build up, make sure there is plenty of drainage through the wall and under the wall at its lowest point. You will also need "tie backs" to hold the wall from the back fill. Gravel is a good back fill because it will not hold water.

If you haven't done this before, call in professionals. If you don't do it right the first time you will have a major disaster on your hands !!
 
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