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Chicken house trusses

nterry1957

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Joined
Apr 3, 2014
Messages
118
Location
SW Missouri the garden spot of the USA
Hey guys.. After a lot of thinking.. I'm torn between hiring a company to build a 30X50X8 pole barn for $13,800 or building a 40X40 myself using repurposed chicken house trusses from a local commercial chicken farm. Best I can figure I can get it done for around $11k. The chicken trusses stick close to the roofline so the cieling would be much higher. Probably 16'-18' at the peak.

I want to make sure I am considering everything before I decide. Any thoughts or experiences?
 
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HoosierMark

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Joined
Jan 31, 2013
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1,446
Location
Southeast IN
If you go the chicken trusses route, make sure you get them cleaned so there is no bird viruses on them. My son has a good friend who played in an old chicken house and is now legally blind because of a virus he picked up. This happened when he was a kid, very sad.
 

BD1

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Joined
Mar 18, 2007
Messages
4,602
Location
north side
This above ^^^^^^

I was informed about the same issue of what could be transmitted in wood from recycled lumber from livestock facilities. I would not take a chance.
I'm sure you get hire someone to verify they are '' clean ''.
 

James-W

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Feb 3, 2013
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12,432
Location
Southeastern Wisconsin
When you take into consideration the cost of getting the building cleaned and then having it inspected by someone who can verify the wood to be safe, you will no doubt exceed the cost of the new pole barn. Unless having the taller ceiling is super important to you, I would go with the pole barn. Have you checked into the cost of a "taller ceiling upgrade" to the pole barn?
 

KenC

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Dec 20, 2009
Messages
2,596
Location
oklahoma
I assume you are referring to the welded metal trusses. My only concern would be the fact that in recent years there have been a number of chicken houses collapse due to heavy snow and/or ice loads. I think an engineer could specify a closer spacing to reduce that risk.
 
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RPH

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Joined
Dec 17, 2006
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4,190
Location
Michigan Thumb
If height is a concern then look at raising the ceiling on the pole barn. Going up on them is fairly cheap.
 

matt_i

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Mar 14, 2008
Messages
10,752
Location
SE Michigan
Anything that's been near chickens stinks to high heaven, and worse when moisture is involved even later down the road. Drive by a chicken farm sometime. You can smell it before you see it. No thanks.
 

rieferman

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Joined
May 18, 2009
Messages
2,586
Location
Collegeville PA (30 min west of Philly)
For the small price difference, I think I'd rather have someone else build it.

Totally agree. Unless budget is extremely tight, you have abundant time that isn't better used elsewhere in your life, and your skills are able to produce pro results, it seems to me that having the building installed by a crew is the way to go in this situation. Add in any complications of having to work with second hand trusses, and there just isn't enough upside in my opinion to go that route.
 

jockeylot

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Joined
Jul 9, 2013
Messages
116
Location
Florida
I think I will go with the pole barn and raise the roof. That way you would never have to worry about what's in the chicken lumber.
 
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