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Pole Barn

Fleetwiz

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 25, 2006
Messages
179
Location
Vernon NJ
Looking to build a 20x24x10 Pole barn in Northern NJ Sussex County.
Anyone have some basic price quotes to have one erected not including concrete. (Also looking for concrete quotes)
Any recommendations are appreciated.
Ready to go.

Thanks in advance

Mike

PS need to be under 500 sf for township permit issues :(
 
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hog1340

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Joined
Jun 6, 2006
Messages
131
Location
North Carolina
Hey Fleetwiz
I just built a 26 x 40 x 11, in Whiting. I used company out of Pa. named Dutchway Pole Barns. They are a sub company of C B Structures(so is Conestoga). Very happy with the price and overall Quality. With uppgraded Doors 2 10'x10' a window and insulated roof it came to $17k.'
Any questions feel free to contact me.

Later Ed
 

bluesman2a

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Joined
Aug 16, 2005
Messages
1,312
Location
Atlanta, Ga.
hog1340 said:
I used company out of Pa. named Dutchway Pole Barns. They are a sub company of C B Structures(so is Conestoga).

Sorry, but could you tell me a little more about this? I couldn't find a link to these guys anywhere. You know the full name, location, or have a link? Any help appreciated.
 

Sundowner

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Joined
Aug 15, 2005
Messages
356
Location
West Milford, NJ
Conestoga structures is out of PA, too. I talked to them for a while about my own pole barn, I think they quoted me $15k for 20x16 pole barn with wood board-and-batten siding without a concrete slab or doors. it wasn't very cheap, (IMO) but they took care of all the permits and said the garage would be up and complete in 3 buisness days.

here's a link to thier site: http://conestogabuildings.com/

I'm not far from you, I'm over in West Milford. so just a word of advice to you that you bounce your ideas off of your local zoning officer, you would not believe the hoops I had to jump though for a variance. I'm $1200 in the hole on township fees/related expenses and I haven't even appeared before the zoning board to plead my case yet. If I were not an engineer capable of signing/sealing my own plan sheets, I'd be more like $7$-$10k in the hole by now for a garage I expect to spend about $10k to build.
 
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rmack898

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Joined
Jan 23, 2007
Messages
3,141
Location
Honu Grove NE Florida
I had Conestoga do my 40x40x12 here in south jersey. 7 windows, 2 10x12 overhead doors, and a 30" entrance door. $21k including permits. It took their crew a total of 9 hours over 2 days start to finish.
 
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Fleetwiz

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 25, 2006
Messages
179
Location
Vernon NJ
Thanks, I got a quote from Pioneer, seems semi reasonable, 8200+
Can anyone give me their best guess(s) on what the concrete pad will run for 20x24. I assume I have to go 4 inches deep. How many yards does that work out to?
Thanks in advance
 

Sundowner

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 15, 2005
Messages
356
Location
West Milford, NJ
Fleetwiz said:
Thanks, I got a quote from Pioneer, seems semi reasonable, 8200+
Can anyone give me their best guess(s) on what the concrete pad will run for 20x24. I assume I have to go 4 inches deep. How many yards does that work out to?
Thanks in advance

In our area I'd guess $2500-ish of you have someone pour it for you.
if you're going to pour it yourself, it's about 6 yards of concrete. most concrete trucks are 10 yards, so they may hit you with about $100-$120/ yard for the concrete + a "short load" charge for ordering less than a full truck. if they do that, order 9 yards and pour a 6" thick slab ;)
 

bluesman2a

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Joined
Aug 16, 2005
Messages
1,312
Location
Atlanta, Ga.
Well to do the math (somebody double-check me here):
20' X 24 X 0.33' gives you 158.4 cubic feet.
158.4 cubic feet divided by 27 (3x3x3 feet= cubic yard) is about 6 cubic yards...

I may be outta line here, but I would consider a 6" slab, you're talking about a difference of:
(20 X 24 X .5) divide by 27 = about 9 yards total.
 

Alex

Active member
Joined
Dec 13, 2005
Messages
35
Location
Nu Joysee
Fleetwiz said:
Looking to build a 20x24x10 Pole barn in Northern NJ Sussex County.
Anyone have some basic price quotes to have one erected not including concrete. (Also looking for concrete quotes)
Any recommendations are appreciated.
Ready to go.

Thanks in advance

Mike

PS need to be under 500 sf for township permit issues :(

We just finished a 46lx26wx16h in south jersey. It was a family project(sons, son in law and one very good friend).
I know what you mean about township issues. it took over two years to get mine passed with variances(Lawyers,engineers had to be involved).
My advice is to let someone like Pioneer buildings do it. The pictures of VvvJRvvV are almost the same as mine and if they handle the permits all the better. the price is also very reasonable.
Also about the cement,on the inside we put down a 2x6 from pole to pole on top of the crushed stone base, to make a form,( this also leaves 3 sides of the pole exposed, may be a requirement, check with the township) that will give you 5 1/2 inches of cement for the floor. When you do the math use .5(half foot) ours came out slightly over (three wheel barrels) better over then under if your doing the work.

VvvJRvvV, just curious if that metal roof "sweats" with the temp changes. I had to put down a layer of styro insulation between the trusses and the metal to prevent it from raining inside the barn. works great...
 

hog1340

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 6, 2006
Messages
131
Location
North Carolina
hey bluesman they actually don't have a web site, but the gentleman I delt with was Rich Zimmerman #717-656-0732.

good luck Ed
 
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