MushCreek
Well-known member
I'll admit; I built my shed in the wrong spot. At the time, it was the path of least resistance, and I needed a shed, quick. Now it's sort of in my front yard, if you can call it that. I want to move it about 50 feet, over some unfriendly terrain. The shed is 8 X 12, and I'm guesstimating maybe 1000 lbs. Here are my thoughts:
1) Try to sell it, then build a new shed in the new spot.
2) Jack it up high enough (32") to ease my trailer under it. Maneuver over to the new spot, then lower it back down.
3) Raise the front to the trailer so that the back is on the ground (about 20" high), then pull the shed up a ramp, onto the top of the trailer.
Other ideas have included hiring a crane, or trying to move it on rollers, but the ground is rough, I would have to change directions a couple times, and I don't have a piece of equipment with the traction and low speed control to do this.
I'm thinking Option 2 is the most likely. I could raise one end with my cherry picker high enough to get 8" blocks under it. Then, go to the other end and raise it 16". Keep switching ends, one block at a time until the trailer will fit under it. Reverse the process once moved to the new site. I'm mostly worried about the safety aspects. I know the shed can handle the stress, but it will be embarrassing and possibly dangerous if I somehow tip it over or it falls off of the blocks at some point.
I like the idea of building a new shed (bigger, of course), but that equals time + money, neither of which is in plentiful supply right now. The original shed cost about $1500 in materials; I'd be surprised if I could sell it for that, especially factoring in the new owner having to move it.
1) Try to sell it, then build a new shed in the new spot.
2) Jack it up high enough (32") to ease my trailer under it. Maneuver over to the new spot, then lower it back down.
3) Raise the front to the trailer so that the back is on the ground (about 20" high), then pull the shed up a ramp, onto the top of the trailer.
Other ideas have included hiring a crane, or trying to move it on rollers, but the ground is rough, I would have to change directions a couple times, and I don't have a piece of equipment with the traction and low speed control to do this.
I'm thinking Option 2 is the most likely. I could raise one end with my cherry picker high enough to get 8" blocks under it. Then, go to the other end and raise it 16". Keep switching ends, one block at a time until the trailer will fit under it. Reverse the process once moved to the new site. I'm mostly worried about the safety aspects. I know the shed can handle the stress, but it will be embarrassing and possibly dangerous if I somehow tip it over or it falls off of the blocks at some point.
I like the idea of building a new shed (bigger, of course), but that equals time + money, neither of which is in plentiful supply right now. The original shed cost about $1500 in materials; I'd be surprised if I could sell it for that, especially factoring in the new owner having to move it.
