douglee25
Member
First post but I'll give you some real world examples. I've been kicking around options for 4 years now. In 4 years pricing has gone up 50%+ easily since I started quoting.
Dallas, TX pricing for reference
1. Metal shop - 30x40x12, boxed beam foundation and slab, 2 non-insulated garage doors (10'), 1 entry door, no insulation/no electric, 2 windows - installed for 26k in 2016 (didn't proceed)
2. Metal shop - 40x50x16 (10X50 was a lean to in that construction for an RV), boxed beam foundation and slab, 2 non-insulated garage doors (14'), 1 entry door, spray foam insulation 1"/no electric, gutters and downspouts included, 2 windows - installed for 52k in 2019 (didn't proceed)
3. Metal shop - 40x50x16 (no lean to), boxed beam foundation and slab, 2 insulated garage doors (14'), 1 entry door with a 10'x10' lean to porch, spray foam insulation 1"/no electric, gutters and downspouts included, 4 windows, bathroom stub ups - installed for 56k - proceeding with this quote at a new house build location
I still have another 12k to add for brick and stone install on the building because it too has to match the house. Then I have about a $1500 electric feed and probably 4-6k for lighting and electrical.
I will be roughly at 75-80k complete for 2000 sq ft with 16' walls and IT WILL match the house.
My recommendation is to go find a metal building supplier like Mueller or similar and have them deliver you a building. You can finish off the exterior to match your house with brick/stone or hardie board, and you'll likely still save quite a bit of money. The advantage to a metal building is time to assemble or weld, the ability to have greater unrestricted ceiling height, greater unsupported spans, super easy to spray foam for insulation, easier to wire (no drilling holes through wood - just conduit and unistrut, etc). To me it's a more economical solution.
Dallas, TX pricing for reference
1. Metal shop - 30x40x12, boxed beam foundation and slab, 2 non-insulated garage doors (10'), 1 entry door, no insulation/no electric, 2 windows - installed for 26k in 2016 (didn't proceed)
2. Metal shop - 40x50x16 (10X50 was a lean to in that construction for an RV), boxed beam foundation and slab, 2 non-insulated garage doors (14'), 1 entry door, spray foam insulation 1"/no electric, gutters and downspouts included, 2 windows - installed for 52k in 2019 (didn't proceed)
3. Metal shop - 40x50x16 (no lean to), boxed beam foundation and slab, 2 insulated garage doors (14'), 1 entry door with a 10'x10' lean to porch, spray foam insulation 1"/no electric, gutters and downspouts included, 4 windows, bathroom stub ups - installed for 56k - proceeding with this quote at a new house build location
I still have another 12k to add for brick and stone install on the building because it too has to match the house. Then I have about a $1500 electric feed and probably 4-6k for lighting and electrical.
I will be roughly at 75-80k complete for 2000 sq ft with 16' walls and IT WILL match the house.
My recommendation is to go find a metal building supplier like Mueller or similar and have them deliver you a building. You can finish off the exterior to match your house with brick/stone or hardie board, and you'll likely still save quite a bit of money. The advantage to a metal building is time to assemble or weld, the ability to have greater unrestricted ceiling height, greater unsupported spans, super easy to spray foam for insulation, easier to wire (no drilling holes through wood - just conduit and unistrut, etc). To me it's a more economical solution.
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Ho-leeeeeeee Sheeeeeeeeeeeeet! You are at half my cost for my completed stick built 48x30x12 with attic truss, 4-5" thick slab (4000psi), 5-6 courses of block (2.5 visible above slab), 1/2 bath plumbing rough in, 2 man doors, 2 9x10 R-18 Clopay carriage doors installed.