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Started By
Message
Metal house.
Posted on 6/30/25 at 2:51 pm
Posted on 6/30/25 at 2:51 pm
Pros and cons on building a metal sided house. Is financing one a problem?
Posted on 6/30/25 at 3:10 pm to tigger4ever
Insurance
Comps
Financing.
I personally think barndominiums are awesome.
Comps
Financing.
I personally think barndominiums are awesome.
Posted on 6/30/25 at 3:16 pm to tigger4ever
Go for it!
Edit- 4500’ total, 2700 living. Contracted out roof, slab, foam insulation and tape/float/texture. Rest we did ourselves. Just under 70$/Ft.
This post was edited on 6/30/25 at 3:23 pm
Posted on 6/30/25 at 3:21 pm to dstone12
What is comps
This post was edited on 6/30/25 at 3:22 pm
Posted on 6/30/25 at 3:27 pm to tigger4ever
Yes. It’s turned into a retirement project. We started as a shed and had plans drawn. We changed some of the layout but we love the 27x50x12 great room. I’d have competed the 3.5ton heat pump by now but the 2 ton mini split in the great room cools the whole place, takes two days to cool from 84 to 73 but then holds temp. Foam is amazing.
Posted on 6/30/25 at 3:32 pm to tigger4ever
Comps are other dwellings that are nearby your house that you are selling that are comparable to yours.
There arent enough metal houses to compare to yours when/if you resell it. So the banks always go low on your assessment. Becasue they never go up. Only taxes and fees go up.
There arent enough metal houses to compare to yours when/if you resell it. So the banks always go low on your assessment. Becasue they never go up. Only taxes and fees go up.
Posted on 6/30/25 at 7:00 pm to dstone12
I’ve already been told by one banker since it’s a nonconventional building harder to get long term fixed rate mortgage.
Posted on 7/2/25 at 9:59 am to Wraytex
If you don’t mind me asking, who do you have it insured with?
Posted on 7/2/25 at 10:19 am to tigger4ever
Usaa currently. Might switch to Hoheim prairie.
Posted on 7/2/25 at 11:08 am to tigger4ever
There are no cons if done correctly. I've had a cheap steal building 6 blocks from the ocean in Myrtle Beach for almost ten years. Its where I went in every storm/ hurricane. Has been 0 maintenance. Make sure to spend the money on upgraded interior structural tubing/beams if in a wind storm prone area.
Theres a company around that builds for $125 per square foot true turn key. The Barndo Company, I just walked a custom build they did in Highlands NC. And the average home price there is $800k. So yeah, they can be made pretty.
Theres a company around that builds for $125 per square foot true turn key. The Barndo Company, I just walked a custom build they did in Highlands NC. And the average home price there is $800k. So yeah, they can be made pretty.
Posted on 7/4/25 at 8:02 am to GhostofJimMorrison
Is the Barndo company regional? Will they come to a rural area in Louisiana?
Posted on 7/4/25 at 9:04 am to GhostofJimMorrison
What about the framing materials? Upgrade to 2”x6”?
Posted on 7/4/25 at 9:16 am to dstone12
Not sure if this is true, but I’ve also heard that the construction method scares off lenders. Supposedly they’re nervous if it’s a post/frame with posts in the ground. And then some lenders don’t understand that there’s a more permanent method.
Posted on 7/4/25 at 9:19 am to turkish
quote:
Not sure if this is true, but I’ve also heard that the construction method scares off lenders. Supposedly they’re nervous if it’s a post/frame with posts in the ground. And then some lenders don’t understand that there’s a more permanent method
Looks like you explained why it’s true in the next paragraph though.
Posted on 7/4/25 at 9:28 am to dstone12
My point was just that I don’t have personal experience that lenders are truly bothered by it. I have seen YouTube videos where it’s mentioned.
Posted on 7/4/25 at 10:34 am to tigger4ever
quote:
Is financing one a problem?
Traditional lenders might not be comfortable but there should be a specialty lender. Barndos are very common in TX where I am. We did an unconventional build for our house but not barndo (ICF walls w/rain collection for water). Capital Farm Credit was happy to finance but they’re only in TX. With the right search words you may find similar in LA.
Barndos are great.
Posted on 7/6/25 at 1:36 pm to PerplenGold
Who designed the ICF house, Did you find a local architect?
We are wanting to do an ICF addition on our rural property, mainly for storm resistance.
We are wanting to do an ICF addition on our rural property, mainly for storm resistance.
Posted on 7/6/25 at 2:21 pm to Scoobs
I built my whole house out of ICF I Louisiana. Hired a contractor out of Tyler Texas to do the ICF. Two stories. Never worry about storms. Not even a little bit. Energy bills half of what my neighbors pay. I had zero issues with financing and my insurance was actually cheaper bc of construction method.
We did Nudera 6” concrete with #4 rebar, 2” of foam on each side. Roof is screwed into walls and reinforced with hurricane clips, spray foam insulation. Master closet doubles as a storm shelter (inside a house that is basically a storm shelter) with a steel door.
We did Nudera 6” concrete with #4 rebar, 2” of foam on each side. Roof is screwed into walls and reinforced with hurricane clips, spray foam insulation. Master closet doubles as a storm shelter (inside a house that is basically a storm shelter) with a steel door.
This post was edited on 7/6/25 at 2:23 pm
Posted on 7/6/25 at 3:03 pm to Scoobs
quote:
Who designed the ICF house, Did you find a local architect?
Yes, local guy. My wife had a friend at work getting one built by this guy. We saw the friend’s plans and talked with him. Set up a meeting with the builder who was the architect, had a crew for construction and designed/installed the rainwater collection system.
Very happy with it and you can do some really cool things with curved walls and window placement is a lot easier than traditional framing.
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