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New His & Hers underway.

junkman104

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 5, 2005
Messages
4,561
Location
Cherokee County N.C.
We are moving to western N. Carolina this fall, I am ready to go now. These were taken this weekend with more to follow.

Hers is 16x26 with a house connected.

Picture380.jpg


Mine is 30x50 post and beam with another days worth of dirt to dig. Yea its bigger than the house (as it should be) The barn will be up and ready for concrete within a month.

Picture379.jpg
 
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bmwpower

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Staff member
Joined
Apr 24, 2005
Messages
12,578
Location
NJ
Holy extension ladder.

Nice to be away from neightbors AND to be in the mountains.
 
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junkman104

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 5, 2005
Messages
4,561
Location
Cherokee County N.C.
The barn is going to be delivered this Saturday and will be erected next week. :) We are taking next week off and staying up there while its being put up and getting some other work done in the meantime. I will have a bunch of pictures to post when we get back.:beer:
 
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junkman104

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 5, 2005
Messages
4,561
Location
Cherokee County N.C.
It was delivered last saturday

Picture393.jpg


Holes drilled and ready to put up

Picture411.jpg


Framed at the end of day one

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Insulation going on.

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Roof insulation and metal going on.

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Finished 7:00pm day two. The floor will be poured next monday So we can start moving all my chit.

Picture427.jpg


Picture428.jpg


Picture431.jpg
 
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BoostAddiction

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2006
Messages
885
Location
Western North Carolina
I've seen this before, but still don't understand it- why don't you pour the floor first, then erect the building on it?

Isn't it easier to pour then build, than the reverse? Does it have something to do with the idea that it is a steel building and not a regular frame build?

Just trying to understand...

-Will
 
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junkman104

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 5, 2005
Messages
4,561
Location
Cherokee County N.C.
BoostAddiction said:
I've seen this before, but still don't understand it- why don't you pour the floor first, then erect the building on it?

Isn't it easier to pour then build, than the reverse? Does it have something to do with the idea that it is a steel building and not a regular frame build?

Just trying to understand...

-Will

This type of building has the posts 3ft in the ground does not require the cost of foundation footers and the bottom board of the barn is the form for the slab. This also makes this type of building the most inexpensive to build. If it wern't for the 3,900 I had to pay for land prep the building would have been 11.25 per square foot including the slab. Try that with stick frame. even with the land prep I have 13.84 per foot. I dont mind the fact of having a metal building, It looks good to me and fit in my budget.
 
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Marv

Member
Joined
Aug 17, 2006
Messages
17
Location
St. Louis,Mo
The concrete is I'm sure more than the building! I'm on a fairly tight budget also. While checking the building prices the concrete has been the most expensive. It is weird that the pour goes in after the building is up, but thats what they do!
 
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junkman104

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 5, 2005
Messages
4,561
Location
Cherokee County N.C.
Marv said:
The concrete is I'm sure more than the building! I'm on a fairly tight budget also. While checking the building prices the concrete has been the most expensive. It is weird that the pour goes in after the building is up, but thats what they do!

I have a quote of 4750.00 for a 4in slab that oncludes the rock,plastic and saw cuts. They pour it Monday.
 
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