Sharpest
Well-known member
I have a shop in rural South Texas. My grandparents bought the building for my dad when he was in high school because they were tired of torn down cars and parts littering their driveway and real estate there is comically cheap. I don't know how old the building is but my family has owned it for ~45 years or so. It is 45x120 ft with a fenced yard the same size and decent sized yards front and back. I have around 1000 sq ft of enclosed office space in the front. It is built next to a rail road and the lot has a couple feet or so grade from front to back so there is about 2' of exposed slab in the front. The frame is built out of drill stem and the roof trusses are sucker rod. Perlins are wood 2x4s and the whole thing is sheathed with galvanized corrugated steel. It has one sliding door front and rear and three facing the fenced yard. The whole building is in pretty rough condition.
The water was turned off for 7 years while I was in school and then Dallas because my mom forgot to pay the bill for...a long time. I wasn't around enough to really care. I got it turned back on last year and there are a couple pretty substantial leaks. It has two full bathrooms that are on elevated platforms to clear the plumbing. There are no pipes in the slab at all. So I technically have running water but the system is so fucked I cant currently use it. It also doesn't help that the supply line from the meter is 1/2" copper tube which I think bottlenecks the whole system. Getting it replaced with 3/4 or 1" line is a high priority.
The most pressing concern, however, is the roof. Its is totally and completely messed up. It is domed with corrugated steel layed over wood perlins just like the sides, but with a rolled roof topping. I cant recall the roof ever being touched in my life and it shows. The rolled material is completely disintegrated and falling off in sheets. This has led to drastic leaking throughout the whole building which is bad enough its damn near unusable when its raining. All of my stuff is getting wet and the ceiling insulation and drywall in all the office rooms is ruined and will need to be replaced. It also doesn't help that a large portion of the roof is covered with several inches of detritus from the mimosa trees in the yard.
I got up there for the first time ever a few weeks ago and was shocked but not surprised with what I found. Here's a shot of the length of the building from the very back edge.
Ton of tree leaves and branches along with two trees that had grown onto and around the eve of the roof.
And a few shots of the general terrible condition
One major problem is that the sheet metal is cupping between the perlins. It is the worst at the peak but is bad enough that water definitely puddles there.
The water was turned off for 7 years while I was in school and then Dallas because my mom forgot to pay the bill for...a long time. I wasn't around enough to really care. I got it turned back on last year and there are a couple pretty substantial leaks. It has two full bathrooms that are on elevated platforms to clear the plumbing. There are no pipes in the slab at all. So I technically have running water but the system is so fucked I cant currently use it. It also doesn't help that the supply line from the meter is 1/2" copper tube which I think bottlenecks the whole system. Getting it replaced with 3/4 or 1" line is a high priority.
The most pressing concern, however, is the roof. Its is totally and completely messed up. It is domed with corrugated steel layed over wood perlins just like the sides, but with a rolled roof topping. I cant recall the roof ever being touched in my life and it shows. The rolled material is completely disintegrated and falling off in sheets. This has led to drastic leaking throughout the whole building which is bad enough its damn near unusable when its raining. All of my stuff is getting wet and the ceiling insulation and drywall in all the office rooms is ruined and will need to be replaced. It also doesn't help that a large portion of the roof is covered with several inches of detritus from the mimosa trees in the yard.
I got up there for the first time ever a few weeks ago and was shocked but not surprised with what I found. Here's a shot of the length of the building from the very back edge.
Ton of tree leaves and branches along with two trees that had grown onto and around the eve of the roof.
And a few shots of the general terrible condition
One major problem is that the sheet metal is cupping between the perlins. It is the worst at the peak but is bad enough that water definitely puddles there.
Last edited:
last year so it all came down.
I didn't have time to delve into the guts of the panel or tally up my total amperage draw but assuming I don't have 8+ gauge wire, this is likely a problem. My dad was an electrical engineer with his PE so I'm hoping for the best