rwilly
Well-known member
Just signed the papers to get a 28 X 64 garage built with 10’ walls.
It’s been a long time coming.
It’s been a long time coming.
Will this structure be wood or metal? With the current high cost of building materials how much has this added to the cost of construction?Just signed the papers to get a 28 X 64 garage built with 10’ walls.
It’s been a long time coming.
Unless it's a flat roof, it probably won't be a problem. My 12' lift fits just fine in my shop with 9' walls. Peak is about 15'. 64' = plenty of choices where to put the columns!That's a big shop. What are going to do with all that space? I hope you don't regret not going with 12' walls in case you ever want a lift.
My shop is a 26x50x10'Everybody I talk to asks about a lift.
I didn’t think I’d need one, my dad got by without one.
I hope I don’t regret it!
I asked if the final cost will drop, if the material costs
Drop.
He said it would.
I’ll be surprised if my price goes down though.
I don’t know what the cost would’ve been a few years ago.
I wouldntAnything to worry about?
The other openings are windows that are 5’ wide X 2’ tall.You think it looks too small and to me it looks huuuuge. As in, I would have to walk across the shop to see what's laying on a bench on the other side. I can see the garage door openings and what looks like a service door with the little landing, but what are the openings just in between? Makes no sense for them to be more service doors but they look too small to be roll up doors.
The world has not gone crazy; where you live has gone crazy. I hear these stories and wonder why people don't move?I didn't see your build post until today. I'm down in Olympia.
I feel your pain.
I put my permit application in with the county on my 36X48 pole barn in 2019. Had to hire a certified wetland biologist to do a wetland delineation then I had to pay for a public hearing for a reasonable use exception due to my property being in the buffer of five surrounding wetlands. That all took about $10K and two years. I finally paid another $5K for the building permit and to pay for the Judge, the hearing, all of the public mailings, and county staff time required to facilitate raking me over the coals and give me the permit anyway. Last year, I got the permit contingent on a mitigation plan that will cost another couple of thousand to install and which required a $2K bond that I could potentially get back in 5 years after submitting annual reports. So, not a thing yet done and I'm in for just under $20K.
Now I've been waiting for the last year for my builder (who had moved on to other projects) to begin the build and the site has now been prepped and is ready for building. The material costs since the original bid two-and-a-half years ago, have increased about 70%, the price of gravel has doubled (I had to bring in about 240 yds), and the two 10x10 overhead garage doors alone went from $4K to $7.5K installed (that's after the 3 month wait to get them).
The builder has been very helpful in that he didn't increase the labor costs from that which he originally bid -- I've just had to pay current materials prices which, as you know, are insane.
It should be up and structurally finished in the next 3 weeks or so and it will have cost well over $100K for a flipping pole building with no electricity, plumbing, and heat.
The world has gone crazy. I feel your pain!
