I recently bought some land and I plan on building two buildings there - a smaller storage building, and a very large shop/house. I used to have a big old wooden barn that was 3 stories high inside, I loved that. It kept the heat up high and gave me limitless room to work with. Also made for a great 3 story mezzanine. Unfortunately like most old barns, it had giant timbers and posts all over the place getting in the way.
Anyway, I'd like to replicate a BIG OLD barn, but with modern materials and mostly free span inside. At this time I am thinking wood poles, metal roof, and wood siding. Probably use steel roof trusses for something around 60x120.
My question is, what is the tallest practical eave height for a wood pole barn like this? I know I need to talk to an engineer, and I know I could build it 100 feet tall if I spent enough money. I'm wondering, what is practical using wood poles?
I'm thinking I would probably use laminated posts (8x8?) on something like perma-columns to reduce the length of the poles needed.
I am in Northern North Carolina, we don't get a lot of wind but the occasional hurricane or tornado can come through. I would imagine the wind load on a 120' wall is one of the biggest limiting factors.
Anyway, I'd like to replicate a BIG OLD barn, but with modern materials and mostly free span inside. At this time I am thinking wood poles, metal roof, and wood siding. Probably use steel roof trusses for something around 60x120.
My question is, what is the tallest practical eave height for a wood pole barn like this? I know I need to talk to an engineer, and I know I could build it 100 feet tall if I spent enough money. I'm wondering, what is practical using wood poles?
I'm thinking I would probably use laminated posts (8x8?) on something like perma-columns to reduce the length of the poles needed.
I am in Northern North Carolina, we don't get a lot of wind but the occasional hurricane or tornado can come through. I would imagine the wind load on a 120' wall is one of the biggest limiting factors.
