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Pole buildings and Termites

OzarkMan

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Joined
Dec 3, 2014
Messages
556
Location
Ozark Missouri
So I live in East Mesa, AZ where it is the capitol of Termites. If you don't have termites at your house here, you will get them. I love the idea and cost efficiency of a wooden pole barn, but worry about the termites coming in from underground and inside the wooden supports. Should I be concerned? I would love to do a 40x50 building on my property but don't want to find it becomes the next "Termite Terrace". They are quick eating voracious variety. We've been battling them in our house and every so often there will be a 3" mud tube dangling in the ceiling. I can't tell you how many times the termite company has been out here drilling away. The original owners never believed in pesticides and I now inherited this eradication process. Been two years so far and they still pop up every now and again.
 
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TommyN

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Mar 13, 2005
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25
Location
Chgo/Phx
A friend has a pole style building near 40th St and Union Hills in NE Phoenix. All Steel.
 

matt_i

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Mar 14, 2008
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10,726
Location
SE Michigan
I am pretty sure you won't find many wood-post pole barns in that area for this exact reason. Steel and concrete would be preferred.
 

-Brent-

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Dec 23, 2009
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4,709
Location
Utah
The cost of repelling them has to catch up (or even break over) the difference in price of a steel vs wood building pretty quickly, no? I don't know what pest control costs but I've heard some horror stories.
 
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Cyberbear

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Nov 23, 2013
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California
What you may save in construction costs, you lose in termite damage and repair. Bite the bullet and have the pros come out and do it right. Or, perhaps put up a stick built structure and not worry as much about termites years later. What about cinder block, too expensive?
 
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O

OzarkMan

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Joined
Dec 3, 2014
Messages
556
Location
Ozark Missouri
Cinder block is more expensive than conventional framing. i would have preferred cinder block construction over steel or wood. Money is tight and will be for the foreseeable future. I guess, I like how quickly some of these pole barns go up that you folks put up. Still makes me wonder as to the longevity of termites. On our house addition, I did spray Boric acid as a preventative and had the ground pre-treated.
 

theoldwizard1

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Joined
Feb 22, 2011
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43,138
Location
SE MI
So I live in East Mesa, AZ where it is the capitol of Termites. If you don't have termites at your house here, you will get them. I love the idea and cost efficiency of a wooden pole barn, but worry about the termites coming in ...
You should ! There are building techniques that will deter termite. 2x6 built up PT posts area good start. Check out perma-columns. Google is your friend.

If possible, do not finish the interior. Or at least consider some kind of "inspection plate" to give you access to each post.

I would be paranoid enough that once or twice a year, I would inspect and treat each post. Well worth the hour or 2 of your time.
 

Oceandweller

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Joined
Jun 26, 2012
Messages
47
Location
Orange Beach
Go with cinder block, just save up. Heck you could get the block and do most of the labor yourself. In fact I am in the same exact boat, I need to do a garage 30x60 and am trying to figure out how I can do it the cheapest. My thought is pay for a level concrete pad and spend the money on a good foundation and then cinder block it off myself. Then get a shed company with metal trusses to come out and frame it. When pouring I plan on getting 8 or 10 Solid steel I beams to support the trusses. I know I am looking at some money in the foundation, 5-8k here and another 4 for the I beams installed but also can get the blocks for 2k and with the roof am shooting for around 25k on the complete build. I am going for hurricane resistance more than anything.
 

Jlbc212

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Joined
Dec 7, 2013
Messages
1,530
Location
Northeast MA
Termites can be found in most areas of the United States. Termites will eat through pressure treated wood. The best protection is to keep wood away from the ground and to keep the wood as dry as possible. I like to see wood at least 8" or more up on a concrete foundation. It's best to leave the concrete exposed so you can regularly inspect for termite tunnels. That means no insulation board up against the concrete. Sadly, the more recent ICC building/energy codes don't take this problem into account.
 

barnjunkie

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Joined
Feb 3, 2015
Messages
181
Location
TN
You can use post protectors to provide protection. Theres really nothing that will completely eliminate the possibility of termites unless you go with steel.
 

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