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Metal building suggestions
Posted on 4/4/22 at 3:40 pm
Posted on 4/4/22 at 3:40 pm
I am currently looking into building a woodworking shop/studio for my wife and I, but I need some advice if anyone could help me.
I'm in the Hattiesburg area and the smallest size I think I would need is around 700-800 sq. Ft, with around 150-200 of that being a studio for my wife's crafts. I'm not sure the type of building I would really need for this.
I received a quote for a general metal building for around $30k. I know prices are high however I was still a little shocked at that price, but this is probably the "new normal."
Any help would be appreciated.
I'm in the Hattiesburg area and the smallest size I think I would need is around 700-800 sq. Ft, with around 150-200 of that being a studio for my wife's crafts. I'm not sure the type of building I would really need for this.
I received a quote for a general metal building for around $30k. I know prices are high however I was still a little shocked at that price, but this is probably the "new normal."
Any help would be appreciated.
Posted on 4/4/22 at 4:21 pm to JeffWinger
quote:
I received a quote for a general metal building for around $30k.
thats high (37.5/sf) but 800 sf is tiny building. keep looking, but dont expect the 10/sf it used to be
Posted on 4/4/22 at 5:29 pm to JeffWinger
call carolina carports from texas for a price, you can thank me later
6 years ago i paid $8k for a 24x30 enclosed garage with two 10ft roll up doors and a walk through entrance door completely installed on my existing slab with the 10ft walls and 175mph wind rated bldg
6 years ago i paid $8k for a 24x30 enclosed garage with two 10ft roll up doors and a walk through entrance door completely installed on my existing slab with the 10ft walls and 175mph wind rated bldg
Posted on 4/4/22 at 7:28 pm to JeffWinger
quote:
I'm not sure the type of building I would really need for this.
I received a quote for a general metal building for around $30k. I know prices are high however I was still a little shocked at that price, but this is probably the "new normal."
What type was quoted? Did that include concrete and erection?
You basically have 3 choices: Red iron, square tubing, or wood framed.
Each can be installed on a concrete slab or dirt. Concrete should run you roughly $6-7/sqft finished.
I’m building a 30x50x12 (insulated) with a 15 ft gable extension, and 30x65 concrete, all turn key for $55k. This same building 2-3 years ago was around $30-35k.
I quoted all the options through various suppliers. A square tubing building was the cheapest metal frame (e.g. Carolina Carport), but not by much. Installed and concrete it was around $48k. I’m going with an all-welded red iron building for $55k. A kit from Mueller was around $61k, accounting for concrete and erection costs. Wood framed from Mallet was $48k.
Posted on 4/4/22 at 9:55 pm to JeffWinger
I would go red iron. You could get a 1200 sq. ft. building from Mueller for half that price. Check it out here. Then build out whatever you need in it.
But like it's been mentioned before, that depends on if you're including concrete and erection. Concrete for that building should run about 8k and erection between 5k and 8k. So the 1200 sq ft Mueller turnkey would be about that 30k price you mentioned.
Whatever you do....Whatever you do.....DO NOT go with a Reed's metal building. I built a 36x64 building and decided to go with a Reed's building to save myself a few grand. Ended up costing me much more in the end. Was supposed to be a DIY building, but I had to pay an erector to come out there because nothing was right. He ended up having to pay a welder to come out and they had to blow holes in shite and everything. Was supposed to be an easy job. Oh, and once you give Reed's your money, customer service flies right out the window.
But like it's been mentioned before, that depends on if you're including concrete and erection. Concrete for that building should run about 8k and erection between 5k and 8k. So the 1200 sq ft Mueller turnkey would be about that 30k price you mentioned.
Whatever you do....Whatever you do.....DO NOT go with a Reed's metal building. I built a 36x64 building and decided to go with a Reed's building to save myself a few grand. Ended up costing me much more in the end. Was supposed to be a DIY building, but I had to pay an erector to come out there because nothing was right. He ended up having to pay a welder to come out and they had to blow holes in shite and everything. Was supposed to be an easy job. Oh, and once you give Reed's your money, customer service flies right out the window.
Posted on 4/5/22 at 12:06 am to JeffWinger
You could get a 20x30 Morgan Building for 12 to 15 thousand
Posted on 4/5/22 at 11:30 am to JeffWinger
(no message)
This post was edited on 10/26/22 at 12:41 pm
Posted on 4/6/22 at 5:57 am to JeffWinger
I appreciate all the advice and suggestions. So far I've gotten 3 quotes (still waiting on a few more) and it seems like everywhere is going to be around at least $30k.
I know some people will say wait for prices to come down but does anybody really expect that to happen?
I know some people will say wait for prices to come down but does anybody really expect that to happen?
Posted on 4/6/22 at 9:10 am to JeffWinger
I had Wilson construction out of wagoner Oklahoma put up my pole barn in Carriere. Did 36x60x16 with 15x60 lean to on each side. Cost was $31,000 in 2019 I would wager it’s 20-30% more today.
Posted on 4/6/22 at 3:58 pm to bayoudude
quote:
6 years ago i paid $8k for a 24x30 enclosed garage with two 10ft roll up doors and a walk through entrance door completely installed on my existing slab with the 10ft walls and 175mph wind rated bldg
You realize that unless the roll up doors are braced in storms along with the inside swinging walk through door, you are only as good as the point in which a door gives way and the entire building disappears?
I supervised the rebuild of Beckwith Electric using a Butler Building two floors and 56,000 s ft of manufacturing space. Board of Directors meets and the son of the owner asked me "Rated for 150mph right?" "Until the first window breaks, loading door gives way or one of the four walk through doors breaks. Then all bets are off. Good Luck." "I thought this was engineered and tested." "It is, but the panels are tested for the space requirements between purlins before the panel bends. No one tested for openings."
Posted on 4/6/22 at 5:34 pm to bluedragon
quote:
You realize that unless the roll up doors are braced in storms along with the inside swinging walk through door, you are only as good as the point in which a door gives way and the entire building disappears?
How does a door failure result in the entire building “disappearing”?
Posted on 4/6/22 at 5:59 pm to LSUtigerME
Uplift and down pressure tears an open metal building apart.
That door or window failure....opens the building up.
Guys at UL provide all the information you want on testing. I watched the testing first hand.
Your metal panels are tested for uplift depending on the purlin spacing and the gauge of the metal used.
We saw it first hand when our building was destroyed by a tornado. Metal panels give way and peel off. Hurricanes do the same thing. Three people inside watched the metal panels peel off and disappear. Not much building left.
That door or window failure....opens the building up.
Guys at UL provide all the information you want on testing. I watched the testing first hand.
Your metal panels are tested for uplift depending on the purlin spacing and the gauge of the metal used.
We saw it first hand when our building was destroyed by a tornado. Metal panels give way and peel off. Hurricanes do the same thing. Three people inside watched the metal panels peel off and disappear. Not much building left.
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