TF8
Member
I used a lot of information from this forum when building my attached two car garage a couple years ago. The goal of that was to keep the daily drivers attached to the house and dry. Owning a home means lots of stuff and I swear a riding mower, push mower, wheelbarrow, generator etc eats up nearly a full garage bay.
I am now in the process of planning my detached garage/barn. I want to move the lift from the attached garage to the barn and have some additional space. Unfortunately I don't have any good drawings right now but will shortly, in the mean time I will try to describe my plan as best possible.
The current planned barn is 26'-28' wide by 36' deep. The ridge runs east west giving me a south facing surface for additional solar. I am planning on a 10'x10' garage door and man door on the west end of the barn. I wasn't planning any windows on the north wall as it faces a hill and will be my tool/machine wall.
The south wall is the side which I am trying to figure out the scale of windows and doors. The plan is let as much natural light in that side of the barn as possible as it faces due south. The wall is 12' tall and 36' long, centered I want to have a double door without center post to get stuff to and from the yard. On either side I was planning on 2 or 3 large windows per side. Here are my questions:
A: I was originally planning on starting the bottom of the windows at 4' off the ground so I could put work benches or carts along that wall without interfering with the windows. With a 4 or 5 foot tall window that gets me near the ceiling. What type of windows do you recommend for a barn? I'm thinking rolling over double hung? (2) 4' tall by 6' wide sliding windows on each side of the door looks good?
B: How tall should the door be to match the scale. My first sketch with a 6'8" man double man door on the south side and windows reaching up to 8' looks silly. I don't think I need an 8' tall double man door but if I go that big the tops of all of the windows/doors on the south wall match up and look "better"
C: I guess I am having an issue with scale given the large wall size. Do I really need big doors and windows to match the scale of the wall?
Thanks,
Tyler
I am now in the process of planning my detached garage/barn. I want to move the lift from the attached garage to the barn and have some additional space. Unfortunately I don't have any good drawings right now but will shortly, in the mean time I will try to describe my plan as best possible.
The current planned barn is 26'-28' wide by 36' deep. The ridge runs east west giving me a south facing surface for additional solar. I am planning on a 10'x10' garage door and man door on the west end of the barn. I wasn't planning any windows on the north wall as it faces a hill and will be my tool/machine wall.
The south wall is the side which I am trying to figure out the scale of windows and doors. The plan is let as much natural light in that side of the barn as possible as it faces due south. The wall is 12' tall and 36' long, centered I want to have a double door without center post to get stuff to and from the yard. On either side I was planning on 2 or 3 large windows per side. Here are my questions:
A: I was originally planning on starting the bottom of the windows at 4' off the ground so I could put work benches or carts along that wall without interfering with the windows. With a 4 or 5 foot tall window that gets me near the ceiling. What type of windows do you recommend for a barn? I'm thinking rolling over double hung? (2) 4' tall by 6' wide sliding windows on each side of the door looks good?
B: How tall should the door be to match the scale. My first sketch with a 6'8" man double man door on the south side and windows reaching up to 8' looks silly. I don't think I need an 8' tall double man door but if I go that big the tops of all of the windows/doors on the south wall match up and look "better"
C: I guess I am having an issue with scale given the large wall size. Do I really need big doors and windows to match the scale of the wall?
Thanks,
Tyler

