monkey-wrench
Active member
I have a 50 x 70 pole barn I'd like to move about 1/10th of a mile. Is it possible? Or feasible?

I have a 50 x 70 pole barn I'd like to move about 1/10th of a mile. Is it possible? Or feasible?
Pole barns of course get a lot of their strength from the ground, so you'd have to have a plan to provide that again. I don't think it's really reasonable.
Ayuh,..... tear it down, move it, reassemble it,....
Most pole barns that size have the poles going 4' - 6' into the ground - at least around here. You have to disassemble and pull the posts out of the ground. In most cases, you are better off starting from scratch unless you have a lot of free labor or the barn is pretty new.
Check out member Bobby31007's thread "the neighbors Pole Barn...."
https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=44952
pole barn size 24' x 48' and he moved it about 400 ft.

Yes, done all the time. I come from three generations of structural movers, we've moved things much larger and heavier than that. Were are you located? I could probably send you contact info for someone who works in your area.I have a 50 x 70 pole barn I'd like to move about 1/10th of a mile. Is it possible? Or feasible?
Got any Amish friends?
Depending on the route, maybe you could back a flat bed semi trailer in and frame the building to sit on it. I’ve done it on a much smaller scale.
Yes, done all the time. I come from three generations of structural movers, we've moved things much larger and heavier than that. Were are you located? I could probably send you contact info for someone who works in your area.
Edit: just checked your profile. My brother lives in/ works out of central Missouri. PM me and I'll send you his phone number.
This is his website jonassenmovers(dot)com
Interesting read, I think I'll just give it away and build new. Thanks everyone for the comments and advice.![]()
Pole barns of course get a lot of their strength from the ground, so you'd have to have a plan to provide that again. I don't think it's really reasonable.
The people who are posting photos of moving large brick homes or the space shuttle are overlooking the fact that there are POLES in a pole barn that go into the ground. That is the foundation. Lifting and moving the structure is the easy part. Replacing the structural integrity lost when the poles are cut off to move the structure is the hard part. Yeah, there are ways to do this, none of them cheap or easy.
Something like Perma-Column is probably the best bet. These are not inexpensive.
https://www.permacolumn.com/
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