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Wilhelm |
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Member ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 408 Joined: 7-September 07 From: Hooterville, OR Member No.: 8,088 Region Association: None ![]() |
Made a deal with my wife that when the kitchen was done I could put up a shop and get my cars and tools out of the dirtfloored polebarn that I have to share with the (her) horses.
I have a few criteria: Steel Concrete floor through out Adequate size, likely 40' x 50' with enough height for a 2 pole lift. Seperate heated tool room to stop the endless condensation and relentless tool self destruction brought on by the moisture drifting out the Oregon winter moors. Everything insulated as from experiance the pole barn is hotter than ambient in the summer and seems colder than ambient in winter. Hot water, shower, toilet, fridge. Doors, windows and garages that seal. As I cruz the net, there is a bewildering array of manufactuerers and resellers all claiming their building is the next better moustrap and the other guys suck. (kinda sounds like the presidential debates lately). What I ask is the collected advise of fellow 914world members who've traveled this task to tell me who has good products, fair prices, who stands behind their product. Ease of erection (buildings, not 914members). Is one type of building better? ie pole, metal beam, truss, or certainly what is complete mickey mouse crap. Disasters you may have encountered, sellers you recommend. Thanks, Wilhelm |
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tango-52 |
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Member ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 149 Joined: 18-October 07 From: San Diego County Member No.: 8,243 Region Association: Southern California ![]() |
Since you are building it from scratch, why not put in a pit instead of lift? My brother lives in Washington, east of Vancouver (Battle Ground) and he built a 3-bay garage. Two are standard height openings and the third he made high enough he could pull his Suburban into with the ski rack and boxes on the roof. That way he could load it up before they went skiing. In that taller bay he also put a pit and laid aluminum diamond plate over it. His place is up on a hill so he didn't have shallow groundwater issues to worry about. Have fun planning it out and good luck.
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