jeff5295
Well-known member
Looking for some opinions here. We bought our house last fall and it included a 36 X 56 pole barn. It had no floor, wiring, etc. Basically just a large storage shed for the previous owner. I'm turning it into a workshop. So far I've added a concrete floor with radiant heat tubing in the slab. Next step will be to insulate, plumb, wire, etc, then finish the interior. My first thought was to install insulation bats in the walls, hang a steel ceiling with blow-in insulation, and steel line the walls. THis is how I did my shop at our last house.
After doing some research, I'm leaning towards spray-on insulation, maybe just an inch to seal the building and possiby finish with bats to save some money. Seams like the spray and bat combo on the walls might be most cost effective and still provide the sealing benefit. At my last shop, I noticed a lot of drafts around the outlets, so I think the spray foam would be a great for sealing the building.
The ceiling gets tricky. The building was built by some Amish people. The trusses are hand made and are 8' OC. They are 2x8 top and bottom with 2x4 bracing. The seams are sandwiched with blocks and nailed together rather than the typical steel plates use in modern truss designs. I'm a little concerned the trusses may not be adequate to take the weight of the steel ceiling with blow-in insulation. I may be able to "sister" some addition joists to increase the load but not sure if that would be cost effective.
Another idea I had was to not install a ceiling at all, leaving the trusses exposed. Use spray insulation directly to the underside of the steel roof. To get a decent R value, the ceiling spray would probably need to be pretty thick (I'm in Iowa, gets pretty cold in winter). I'm concerned as to how this might look, just leaving spray foam exposed. Maybe there's a way to "finish" or cover the foam? Also not thrilled about leaving the trusses exposed as I think it will look "unfinished" or cheap. I'm not trying to make a showroom, but I like my place to look nice.
A third option might be this. Spray an inch on underside of roof. Use some light weight alternative to steel sheets on ceiling to decrease load on trusses (or strengthen the trusses and use steel). Blow in insulation on top of ceiling. I should mention this building has no ridge or soffet venting. Not sure why he did this. The spray would seal the roof, but would I have trouble with the double insulation (under roof and top of flat ceiling)? There would be no air flow in the attic area. If I chose to do the flat ceiling with blow-in, should I bother with the spray on the ceiling (maybe just do corners and edges to seal it)?
Anyone run into this situation before? Any suggestion/opinions?
How could I calculate the load of these trusses to see if they could take the weight of steel, since they were handmade?
If I decide to go with exposed trusses, any good way to make it look nicer?
Any light weight/good looking alternatives to steel for the ceiling?
I don't have a huge budget for this, but it needs to look nice. I plan to do all the work myself.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeff
After doing some research, I'm leaning towards spray-on insulation, maybe just an inch to seal the building and possiby finish with bats to save some money. Seams like the spray and bat combo on the walls might be most cost effective and still provide the sealing benefit. At my last shop, I noticed a lot of drafts around the outlets, so I think the spray foam would be a great for sealing the building.
The ceiling gets tricky. The building was built by some Amish people. The trusses are hand made and are 8' OC. They are 2x8 top and bottom with 2x4 bracing. The seams are sandwiched with blocks and nailed together rather than the typical steel plates use in modern truss designs. I'm a little concerned the trusses may not be adequate to take the weight of the steel ceiling with blow-in insulation. I may be able to "sister" some addition joists to increase the load but not sure if that would be cost effective.
Another idea I had was to not install a ceiling at all, leaving the trusses exposed. Use spray insulation directly to the underside of the steel roof. To get a decent R value, the ceiling spray would probably need to be pretty thick (I'm in Iowa, gets pretty cold in winter). I'm concerned as to how this might look, just leaving spray foam exposed. Maybe there's a way to "finish" or cover the foam? Also not thrilled about leaving the trusses exposed as I think it will look "unfinished" or cheap. I'm not trying to make a showroom, but I like my place to look nice.
A third option might be this. Spray an inch on underside of roof. Use some light weight alternative to steel sheets on ceiling to decrease load on trusses (or strengthen the trusses and use steel). Blow in insulation on top of ceiling. I should mention this building has no ridge or soffet venting. Not sure why he did this. The spray would seal the roof, but would I have trouble with the double insulation (under roof and top of flat ceiling)? There would be no air flow in the attic area. If I chose to do the flat ceiling with blow-in, should I bother with the spray on the ceiling (maybe just do corners and edges to seal it)?
Anyone run into this situation before? Any suggestion/opinions?
How could I calculate the load of these trusses to see if they could take the weight of steel, since they were handmade?
If I decide to go with exposed trusses, any good way to make it look nicer?
Any light weight/good looking alternatives to steel for the ceiling?
I don't have a huge budget for this, but it needs to look nice. I plan to do all the work myself.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeff
