Does anyone know where I can get a pole barn design at a reasonable price? I had one quote at $750.00! I thought that was pretty bananas for a relatively simple design.
This is what I had in mind. http://www.pole-barn.info/pole-barn-far ... 04040.html
Apparently the word design is invisible!
I need a pole barn design with specs to bring to the county office for them to issue a building permit. You both been drinking? LOL!
You may want to do a little planning before you settle on a set of prints for a pole barn. It is best to know what features are important to meet your needs before jumping right into a design. Below is a link that should help you make some of those decisions. After you list what needs you have you can look for plans that incorporate the majority of items on your wish list.
When I built my pole barn I found that working with a local contractor on my "rough design" was sufficient for what I wanted as far as how the building was to look. Like anything else the devil is in the details and that is where your planning guide comes into place. I would also recommend that you shy away from the majority of "kit" barns as many if not most seem to skimp on the quality of materials.
Back home in WI a lot of the pole barns are built by the Amish and you really get a good barn. Down here 100% are built by those that could not get a green card and you have to watch everything if you general the building yourself. Thats where the good local contractor comes into place if you want your barn turn key. If you have little experience with the building trades I highly recommend you get yourself that good local contractor. Good luck with it.
I planned and built my own for around $5,700, 8 yrs ago, floor included. Did every scrap of work. Fun but the minute it was finished was when it became too small
Think big Don.
Last edited by Cossack on Wed Jul 14, 2010 11:22 am, edited 1 time in total.
Without knowing what the county office requires it'd be hard to recommend anything. BUUuuuut with that said; you're a seemingly intelligent fella....couldn't you get some graph paper & sketch out a design? Since a pole barn is basically just a frame with sheet metal covering it should be easy enough to cobble something together that they'd find acceptable unless they require a licensed architect to have drawn it up.
Then you could give your design to the contractor & he could use it as a rough guide to give you exactly what you want without causing yourself grief with the county.
Obviously I don't know if that idea would work for you but it'd sure cost you less than $750 for the graph paper, compass, ruler & pencil
I know down the road your going to build a little cabin may as well do it all in one shot, a little cabin with a garage attached, log cabin kits, you got any money left
Boo, try Home Hardware they have some pretty good designs with stamped engineered plans. The prices are pretty resonable. You may have to visit a Home Hardware outside the big city. Good Luck
[color=#0000BF]Boo, why don't you check into these solar panel buildings. There are companies that will build you a building for free (in Ontario), if you allow them to install solar panels on the roof. color]
FYI, For those of you interested, there is a bulletin board/forum dedicated directly to barns at www.BarnsBB.com
One cool thing is that they have a moderator that is a Professional Engineer that peeks in from time to time and answers questions about designs and construction.
In 1998 eastern Ontario experienced an exceptional ice storm. There was freezing rain for 3 days non stop. Western Quebec and Eastern Ontario had never experienced this since record keeping. The ice on fields was thick enough to skate in ( personal experience) A blade of grass sticking out of the snow became an icicle 1 inch thick. This storm was punishing to trees. In Eastern Ontario, white cedars are very popular, and they took a severe beating. I remember my father saying that he could not relax outside because all he could hear was the cracking of the trees endlessly.
On the positive side, when nature deals you lemons, you make a sawmill and build a barn.
We drew up our own plans, and only had to get the rafters signed off by a professional engineer.
This was in Alexandria (Glengarry). The guy we had to see for the permit understood what we were doing, understood the design (over kill for sure) and only asked for the rafters to be approved. I can send you what we did if you think it will help. Just remember it is ungraded wood where 8" minimum diameter tamarac was used as headers 8 foot between cedar posts set @ 5 feet deep. The maximum height of the posts was 10 feet, and maximum height of the building is 16 feet. let me know if you think I can help.