Great video. After becoming involved with an unscrupulous contractor (due to my own stupidity) in Central Utah it's so refreshing and uplifting to see how a job can be accomplished professionally and honestly.
Hey Luke! If you dont mind me asking who the contractor was? I am in central Utah as well and we are looking for a contractor to do just about everything. I would love to be able to do some of it but can't due to health. Could you point me in the right direction? Thanks!
@@mattzobell19 I'm busy right now but I'll get back to you shortly with some information and advice. I learned the hard way on this one, never had an issue before this.
@@mattzobell19 The issues we are having is with Hola Construction and Concrete. The numerous issues are with 'work' done and work not done but paid for. I could get into specific issues if you want. To steer you in the right direction you should never pay for work and supplies prior to completion. That is what they did here and it has gone nowhere except down the drain. Excuse after excuse time after time. Nothing completed but more money demanded for jobs not completed. My brother was in construction most of his adult life and he advised never to put money up front. Also, research their contractor licence as the person we are dealing with is using one that is not even his. If you have time you can find videos on UA-cam from Detroit with Rob Wolchek on dishonest contractors and they are very interesting and appropriate. Good luck.
That's sucks, sorry to hear that. My brother is a contractor and screwed over a few people . Same thing with the excuses and nothing to code.. When it comes to your home do it once and do it right.
Planning to build in the next few years on my property. I’ve been debating a traditional home vs barndominium. Have been skeptical of the barndominium route (especially without a basement) but this video may have tipped the scale for me. I love what you did with this!
@@YeetmanSkeetman The dude constrains himself within "buzz terms" and would never think to put a basement in a "barndominium" strictly because he believes that basements only belong in "homes" solely based on language without any real life context. It probably broke him when you asked that.
Not sure where you live but a coworker recently got the estimate on a 2500 sqft stick built house on his property. No garage, just house and the best quote he got was $425,000.
This video was amazing. Love the price ticker but more importantly I love the way the progress bar shows each section being worked on. This also gives potential barndominium owners a really good idea of what all has to go in to constructing such a building.
Assuming water service is to the lot, add septic, plumbing, electrical, appliances, finishes, all the other stuff I'm not thinking of. Better bring a half-million to that table! Super cool time lapse and build though. Probably the best I've seen on the 'tubes.
There will ALWAYS be someone who feel you charge to much. Let them... This was a very good video and you can see that you are getting talent, skill, and genuine care with your work.
Just so everyone knows, the rule of thumb on labor usually = cost of material. also the poster stated they only handled the frame, not interiors. so the final cost on this build is probably like 3x $216k
Super interesting I really enjoyed the fast sequencing and descriptions during the funding expenditure. Still a lot of work and funding left to go through but its dry and secure. I'll be looking for the next episodes. These barndominiums are pretty cool.
We built our home just like this 6 years ago. Without the land, out Barn shell was about $145K for a 120x48 shell. The interior home, plus 4 hobby rooms on the other end of the building, and a basement, totals around 6000 sq. feet under air, with a big enough shop/garage to park 7 or 8 cars easily. The interior, plus the basement was probably another 250K. We did ALOT of work ourselves, and a few small thungs are still unfinished but, it was by far the most for my money we have ever gotten on a house.
hey brother awesome video. the only thing I can think to improve video is for you to incorporate elapsed time. maybe by day number 1,2,4,10,.. etc so viewers can get a feel of how much actual time goes by.
This is great. I'd love to make something like this. I appreciate the step by step and cost breakdown. Keep up the great work. Also if you're interested I'll pay more for a smaller one over where I live.
Have watched several of your videos. The MAD county build series l watched religiously. Had l never seen one of your videos and this was the first one l’d watched, the dollar counter in the corner would be enough for me to subscribe. One more addition l would say would ice it for you would be a day counter. I understand days for builds are dependent on several factors. Weather, worker availability, equipment availability, material availability, etc. But a general idea of build times will help your potential customer base tremendously with deciding to use you. Just a thought, but keep up the excellent work and content.
Thankyou, really enjoyed watching it all come together. Clearly a way to go. Unfortunately I live in England where the price of wood alone would be extortionate and I doubt if permission would be granted for a variety of reasons. Pity. A home like that would be ideal for me.
This is the second one of these builds I’ve watch. I’d there no insulation in the ceiling of the building? Thank you for the education on these types of builds.
Great video! Is there a way to see the inside living space and what kind of room it has? Looking at going this route with a home and would like to see what the inside of the living quarters turned out like. I have to sell my wife on it and that is a big factor for her. If nothing else is there somewhere we can see the floor plan?
If you think about it for a 2800 sq ft home you will pay double that so all in that’s a good deal. Solid structure for a good price. Great job nice building.
Yeah you also get minor things like a kitchen, some bathrooms, drywall... The 'dominium' parts of the barndominium are where the real costs start to add up.
@@MrPostFrameI know I'm watching while working, but did I miss plumbing and electrical? Did someone else do it so you didn't include it or is the customer about to tear down a lot of work to add that in? Also, what's the owner's channel so I can hopefully get a full cost breakdown of a finished build?
@@MrPostFrame Doesn’t the metal roof condensate? Some other roofs I’ve seen like this had an air gap to address condensation and some sheeting with a membrane like polyglass doubled at eaves valleys and ridge for ice shield.
Very informative and helpful. I've been looking at possibly doing one of these but I have come to the conclusion that you still have a metal shed, barn, or warehouse when you are done and a relatively expensive one at that. Upside is I could park the winnebago in the living room.
The cost comes out to $48 per sq. ft. that is amazing. I wish you could build in Southern Indiana I would hire you guys, that is super economical compared to the avg. $75-100 per sq. ft. in my area for a contractor build.
Once actually finished to the standard a standard gone is sold at, it will be around $150/sqft. Dont let these videos fool you, these are only truly saving money if you do a lot of the work yourself.
Great construction quality and video. Wondering the cost of land, septic, water well, gas/electric heating, roof insulation, finishing interior. Would I be correct at 400-500k? Where is your company located?
What I'd like to know about is inspections. With footers you have to get the rebar and everything looked at typically by the county prior to pouring. Is it the same? Seems like you could dig everything and pour everything in a day if you had your mini cages tied. Also framing... Do you have inspections there too? I'd assume MEP inspections are roughly the same since Barndo builds tend to be very similar to lean construction since your installing a roof prior to starting underground/slab.
It all really depends on where u are located. It’s different here from one county to the next. I would say the majority of counties run similar to a stick frame build.
can I ask. I'm used to seeing metal bracing here in Australia... I don't see you use and bracing... only temporary bracing... does the roof sheeting become the entice brace
We will be going barndo in the next couple years. We are relocating from TX to TN. This video enlightened me, since my build will be smaller with single story living space < 16 ft ceilings in shop so maybe a loft over the living space, and I had not even considered the spray foam so I am glad I watched. Can you tell us if this type of build is more or less expensive than a poured slab and metal building please? Thank you.
What do you think the finished building would have been if you completed it? Double? Wondering how this compares to traditional home building. Thanks, great video!!
I'm sure I'll sound like a beginner but I'm confused about the interior slab being tied into the piers? Are forms placed at the exterior of the piers and the slab is poured to include the piers so they become one slab?
Really love these barndominiums, but here’s my question. I thought they’d use metal framing? Is that not the case most of the time? One of the selling points for me is the ones that use metal framing which requires less maintenance and is more durable. Do you have any builds that use the metal framing instead of wood framing? Wife and I are looking at getting land and are torn between a manufactured home or a barndominium.
This is an awesome set up and I'm interested in constructing something similar. Are you able to give me a ballpark of what the construction costs were?
Great video - why did you choose to pour the slab after the walls were up? Also building the structure like this i assume has a lower wind rating for areas like South FL that gets hurricanes? Thank you kindly.
Where is the electric and how do you get it in after everything is spray foamed? Other than a few porch lights I saw nothing and no cost associated with and plumbing as well? I saw pipes stubbed out the floor?
I noticed that you were using 2 x 6's x 4 pcs to make the perimeter posts. Was that done to reduce the amount of twist & warp that 6 x 6 or 6 x 9 full posts are notorious for? Great job.
That is a big houe for 216k home loan but does that include the finishing of the city power n sewer and all the utility connections for move in living status as well ?
Great video! Very creative way of showing the construction process!!! Thanks for the education! What general cost per square foot do you consider for a Barndominium? Thanks, Ben
Why would you put a better roof on the porch than on the top of the structure? Why was there no insulation to the roof? 2nd, there should be a fire wall between the shop and the living quarters
Utility hook ups and such are going to vary based on your location and where on your land you’re building. Here is a septic cost breakdown we did ua-cam.com/video/swCz8hxd1-8/v-deo.html
Could you do wood flooring for the living space and save money on not having the concrete slab? Also, why footers and slab and not just slab? Thank you!
I know I'm late to the party but this was a great video. Has lumber gone up in price since this was filmed? Do you think the price is anywhere near the same still?
so making this into a 3-4 bedroom 2-3 bath home how much more money would that cost on top of this? i was looking into building a house like this but from what i see the cost is more then buying a slightly used 4 bedroom home for 200k-300k in the mid west but the barndominium would still cost the same or more and it seems to be inferior to a brick home imo. how will it hold up 100 years from now vs a brick home is the question.
Best video. No unnecessary talking. Precise pricing.
Thanks for watching!
Is funny how us human beings are because I would of preferred the talking over the music. Lol
31:46 cost breakdown overview
Thank you @muffinsmuffins8074
😂😂😂😂😂
I mean for the price, you get a really good starting point for your build. Very cool.
Great video. After becoming involved with an unscrupulous contractor (due to my own stupidity) in Central Utah it's so refreshing and uplifting to see how a job can be accomplished professionally and honestly.
Sorry to hear you had a poor experience. It’s hard to imagine being dishonest with folks about their homes
Hey Luke! If you dont mind me asking who the contractor was? I am in central Utah as well and we are looking for a contractor to do just about everything. I would love to be able to do some of it but can't due to health. Could you point me in the right direction? Thanks!
@@mattzobell19 I'm busy right now but I'll get back to you shortly with some information and advice. I learned the hard way on this one, never had an issue before this.
@@mattzobell19 The issues we are having is with Hola Construction and Concrete. The numerous issues are with 'work' done and work not done but paid for. I could get into specific issues if you want. To steer you in the right direction you should never pay for work and supplies prior to completion. That is what they did here and it has gone nowhere except down the drain. Excuse after excuse time after time. Nothing completed but more money demanded for jobs not completed. My brother was in construction most of his adult life and he advised never to put money up front. Also, research their contractor licence as the person we are dealing with is using one that is not even his. If you have time you can find videos on UA-cam from Detroit with Rob Wolchek on dishonest contractors and they are very interesting and appropriate. Good luck.
That's sucks, sorry to hear that. My brother is a contractor and screwed over a few people . Same thing with the excuses and nothing to code..
When it comes to your home do it once and do it right.
Planning to build in the next few years on my property. I’ve been debating a traditional home vs barndominium. Have been skeptical of the barndominium route (especially without a basement) but this video may have tipped the scale for me. I love what you did with this!
Why not just also build a basement?
Could always just put in a storm shelter if that's what you want a basement for.
1 with the space of the shop you dont really need a basement. 2 you could add a basement under the living space if you wanted too
@@YeetmanSkeetman The dude constrains himself within "buzz terms" and would never think to put a basement in a "barndominium" strictly because he believes that basements only belong in "homes" solely based on language without any real life context. It probably broke him when you asked that.
Not sure where you live but a coworker recently got the estimate on a 2500 sqft stick built house on his property. No garage, just house and the best quote he got was $425,000.
This video was amazing. Love the price ticker but more importantly I love the way the progress bar shows each section being worked on. This also gives potential barndominium owners a really good idea of what all has to go in to constructing such a building.
This looks like Ryan Knorr's new home. Nicely built.
It is!
Assuming water service is to the lot, add septic, plumbing, electrical, appliances, finishes, all the other stuff I'm not thinking of.
Better bring a half-million to that table!
Super cool time lapse and build though. Probably the best I've seen on the 'tubes.
There will ALWAYS be someone who feel you charge to much. Let them... This was a very good video and you can see that you are getting talent, skill, and genuine care with your work.
Thank you! So true.
@@MrPostFrame Im assuming this is only material costs.. if not lol do you service georgia!!!!
@Mindful Mega yes he said in the intro that this was just going to be the materials minus the labor cost
Your conversion rate from lead to job should be less than 40%. It it’s higher, you’re not charging enough.
Let them if they gonnacomplain about the price then they should build it themselves and do all the work
Really unique timelapse and overlay! Great way to get the process across.
People who build things just amaze me…….respect!
Thank you!
Just so everyone knows, the rule of thumb on labor usually = cost of material. also the poster stated they only handled the frame, not interiors. so the final cost on this build is probably like 3x $216k
plus cost of land, permitting, etc so I'd say anywhere from 750 to 800k total before furnishing depending on plot size
The interior framing cost is included in the $216k though.
Labor is way closer to material x2 than 1 to 1
Wow! These guys work incredibly fast!
🤣🤣
As a former builder I can say this, very efficient and well done build. If I were to do something like this, this would be the crew I secured.
Thank you!
Super interesting I really enjoyed the fast sequencing and descriptions during the funding expenditure. Still a lot of work and funding left to go through but its dry and secure. I'll be looking for the next episodes. These barndominiums are pretty cool.
I can't say anything better than what has already been said - this has me hooked! Anyone else notice the skid lift slowly lowering? Just me? Ok hehe
I'm 30 seconds in and I can't help but compliment this editing! BRAVO!!!
Thank you!
@@MrPostFrame Welcome!
We built our home just like this 6 years ago. Without the land, out Barn shell was about $145K for a 120x48 shell. The interior home, plus 4 hobby rooms on the other end of the building, and a basement, totals around 6000 sq. feet under air, with a big enough shop/garage to park 7 or 8 cars easily. The interior, plus the basement was probably another 250K. We did ALOT of work ourselves, and a few small thungs are still unfinished but, it was by far the most for my money we have ever gotten on a house.
😂 how much for the thungs??
@@ParadiseCoveCam Are you trying to be funny or, just being a dick?
Wow, that’s an amazing building. It’d be nice to have a day counter as well.
hey brother awesome video. the only thing I can think to improve video is for you to incorporate elapsed time. maybe by day number 1,2,4,10,.. etc so viewers can get a feel of how much actual time goes by.
This might be the coolest video I’ve ever seen. This is America
Way to go guys yall did a great job as well with the editing
This is great. I'd love to make something like this. I appreciate the step by step and cost breakdown. Keep up the great work. Also if you're interested I'll pay more for a smaller one over where I live.
Have watched several of your videos. The MAD county build series l watched religiously.
Had l never seen one of your videos and this was the first one l’d watched, the dollar counter in the corner would be enough for me to subscribe. One more addition l would say would ice it for you would be a day counter. I understand days for builds are dependent on several factors. Weather, worker availability, equipment availability, material availability, etc.
But a general idea of build times will help your potential customer base tremendously with deciding to use you.
Just a thought, but keep up the excellent work and content.
GREAT QUESTION ITS ALWAYS GOOD TONO HOW LONG IT USUALLY TAKES SO U CAN PLAN FOR OTHER THINGS AND ALSO NO ITS NOT TAKING TO LONG
Yes!! This is very cool! I'm hoping for something like this in the future. Really appreciate this video.
Here I am excited to see my dream home. And then I find out it is for my buddy Ryan! lol.
Lol yep!
Love these homes and the production quality of your videos. What I don’t understand is why no barndo, or at least any I’ve seen, has a basement.
Our build has a partial basement. We are looking to do a build in the future with a basement.
So cool to see the overview, thanks guys!
Thanks for watching!
This is Ryan Knorr's property. Very cool!
I'm pretty sure he doesn't want his full name on the WWW for all to know. You should probably delete this post.
Thank u very much for what I are showing and how it doing. I really like this. And I’m in NC
Absolutely loved this great video! Thank you for doing this!
Thankyou, really enjoyed watching it all come together. Clearly a way to go. Unfortunately I live in England where the price of wood alone would be extortionate and I doubt if permission would be granted for a variety of reasons. Pity. A home like that would be ideal for me.
This is the second one of these builds I’ve watch. I’d there no insulation in the ceiling of the building? Thank you for the education on these types of builds.
Thanks for watching. The homeowners added insulation in the attic after we left, this was a project we partially contracted
maybe so, but that would be between him the home owner. dont you think
Great video! Is there a way to see the inside living space and what kind of room it has? Looking at going this route with a home and would like to see what the inside of the living quarters turned out like. I have to sell my wife on it and that is a big factor for her. If nothing else is there somewhere we can see the floor plan?
I love your videos. But would it be possible to add the dates? From beginning to end?
If you think about it for a 2800 sq ft home you will pay double that so all in that’s a good deal. Solid structure for a good price. Great job nice building.
We agree! Thanks!
Yeah you also get minor things like a kitchen, some bathrooms, drywall... The 'dominium' parts of the barndominium are where the real costs start to add up.
I see you installed the metal roof directly on top of roof trusses ...there is no water barrier need??
Love the video and build. Liked, shared and subscribed, best video ive seen. Thank you
At 28:40, LIQUID NAILS ON STAIR LANDINGS! GENIUS! I HATE squeaky stair and landings!
What about the living quarters interior? That was the part I was most curious in. But I greatly enjoyed this video! Thank you!
We weren’t contracting the remainder of the build but the homeowner will share that on their channel!
@@MrPostFrameI know I'm watching while working, but did I miss plumbing and electrical? Did someone else do it so you didn't include it or is the customer about to tear down a lot of work to add that in? Also, what's the owner's channel so I can hopefully get a full cost breakdown of a finished build?
I think the owners channel is linked in description
Excellent video!
Thank you!
Unless I missed something, You foamed the garage walls, but the ceiling has nothing for insulation.
It does now. Homeowner handled that on their own
Wonder how they did it after it looked to be all buttoned up?
I’d think it would be real easy to do blow in insulation after it was buttoned up.
Attics like that typically are not insulated, you insulate the ceiling.
@@MrPostFrame
Doesn’t the metal roof condensate? Some other roofs I’ve seen like this had an air gap to address condensation and some sheeting with a membrane like polyglass doubled at eaves valleys and ridge for ice shield.
Very informative and helpful. I've been looking at possibly doing one of these but I have come to the conclusion that you still have a metal shed, barn, or warehouse when you are done and a relatively expensive one at that. Upside is I could park the winnebago in the living room.
At the end of the day a barndo works for some + not others. Living space will cost the same as any other type of home with the same finish level.
The cost comes out to $48 per sq. ft. that is amazing. I wish you could build in Southern Indiana I would hire you guys, that is super economical compared to the avg. $75-100 per sq. ft. in my area for a contractor build.
$175-$225 per sq ft in my area. This build style is one hell of a deal.
Once actually finished to the standard a standard gone is sold at, it will be around $150/sqft. Dont let these videos fool you, these are only truly saving money if you do a lot of the work yourself.
I recognize this place!! Lol. UA-camrs helping UA-camrs!
WoW. Speechless
Thanks!
Very, very impressive job.
Beautiful work
I’d like to learn what about pluming,electrical, Lighting, bathrooms bedrooms
All I need is the land, extra for getting the land ready, utilities and interior. And say goodbye to 400K. Great build.
Thanks!
THIS IS AWESOME!!!!!!
Thanks!
Best time line I've seen
I love this. Justice need to find the right place to build. (And sell my current house)
definitely in the future for me and my cnc machines.
Wow great job! looks amazing
Thank you
I always enjoy these videos man that looks easy
Thanks for watching!
Excellent video. Like to have seen what was done on the interior roofing area.
Thanks 👍, Blown in fiberglass was put above the ceiling for insulation.
Is there going to be a finished product video of this as a whole total cost? A video of after the framing! Like your house finish product run down!
We hope to give a final tour of this build once the client finishes the interior.
Great construction quality and video. Wondering the cost of land, septic, water well, gas/electric heating, roof insulation, finishing interior. Would I be correct at 400-500k? Where is your company located?
Anyone else notice the skid steer slowly lowering while they were sheeting the porch roof???
Okay I have the land for it let me know when you’re ready to build haha nice work man just subscribed!
Curious why you don’t use any sheathing or roof decking. Is that something specific to post frame homes or is it just not required where you are?
What I'd like to know about is inspections. With footers you have to get the rebar and everything looked at typically by the county prior to pouring. Is it the same? Seems like you could dig everything and pour everything in a day if you had your mini cages tied.
Also framing... Do you have inspections there too? I'd assume MEP inspections are roughly the same since Barndo builds tend to be very similar to lean construction since your installing a roof prior to starting underground/slab.
It all really depends on where u are located. It’s different here from one county to the next. I would say the majority of counties run similar to a stick frame build.
curious to know if yall insulated the shop ceiling or didn't bother because your focus was warmth not staying cool
u brought me your book to grade tonight, ill have it graded before u wake up in the morning, then u can be on your way
can I ask. I'm used to seeing metal bracing here in Australia... I don't see you use and bracing... only temporary bracing... does the roof sheeting become the entice brace
We will be going barndo in the next couple years. We are relocating from TX to TN. This video enlightened me, since my build will be smaller with single story living space < 16 ft ceilings in shop so maybe a loft over the living space, and I had not even considered the spray foam so I am glad I watched. Can you tell us if this type of build is more or less expensive than a poured slab and metal building please? Thank you.
What do you think the finished building would have been if you completed it? Double? Wondering how this compares to traditional home building. Thanks, great video!!
Looks great, but I did not see any insulation under the roof or in the ceiling. Did I miss that? Thank you
Client added insulation above ceiling/attic themselves
In terms of earthquake resistance how do post frame homes theoretically stand up?
I'm sure I'll sound like a beginner but I'm confused about the interior slab being tied into the piers? Are forms placed at the exterior of the piers and the slab is poured to include the piers so they become one slab?
when you hit 10 bands at the 15% mark of the build im not gonna lie it made me wanna learn how to do construction
Really love these barndominiums, but here’s my question. I thought they’d use metal framing? Is that not the case most of the time? One of the selling points for me is the ones that use metal framing which requires less maintenance and is more durable. Do you have any builds that use the metal framing instead of wood framing? Wife and I are looking at getting land and are torn between a manufactured home or a barndominium.
Amazing video!!
Thank you!!
This is an awesome set up and I'm interested in constructing something similar. Are you able to give me a ballpark of what the construction costs were?
Great video - why did you choose to pour the slab after the walls were up? Also building the structure like this i assume has a lower wind rating for areas like South FL that gets hurricanes? Thank you kindly.
Where is the electric and how do you get it in after everything is spray foamed? Other than a few porch lights I saw nothing and no cost associated with and plumbing as well? I saw pipes stubbed out the floor?
With the absent of rebar, am I right to assume that you've poured fiber reinforced concrete?
When do you put windows in your barndo and what does it mean to be dried in. Does it have windows and doors
I noticed that you were using 2 x 6's x 4 pcs to make the perimeter posts. Was that done to reduce the amount of twist & warp that 6 x 6 or 6 x 9 full posts are notorious for? Great job.
Nice build, and a good lol with the intro hero music lol
amazing project
Thanks
That is a big houe for 216k home loan but does that include the finishing of the city power n sewer and all the utility connections for move in living status as well ?
I knew this project looked familiar!!!! RKLC!!
Ha yes!
Multiply by 3 to hire the labor and modestly finish it out, correct?
Brilliant way to edit and cost a video build! Thank you. I feel bad asking but did you do more for the interior?
Thanks for watching and no we let the homeowner take over contracting past what you see here
barndonadium are the way to go, basically a huge barnhouse with a garage in it and very cheap
Love this I want one!
Great video! Very creative way of showing the construction process!!! Thanks for the education! What general cost per square foot do you consider for a Barndominium? Thanks, Ben
Thanks! If you aren’t doing any of the work most run $190-225/sf around here in Iowa
Why would you put a better roof on the porch than on the top of the structure? Why was there no insulation to the roof? 2nd, there should be a fire wall between the shop and the living quarters
Attic insulation was added by the homeowner after we completed our work. The steel provides the fire barrier
Great video. What is the long cylinder @20:11 ? Shop drain?
Yes that is the shop drain…made by ACO
Curious how much more it would be for everything everything. Like well and septic. Electric cabinets and so on
Utility hook ups and such are going to vary based on your location and where on your land you’re building. Here is a septic cost breakdown we did ua-cam.com/video/swCz8hxd1-8/v-deo.html
new to the channel... Are things like plumbing, electrical, tile work, finishing, not included?
How much with work total price average?
Could you do wood flooring for the living space and save money on not having the concrete slab? Also, why footers and slab and not just slab? Thank you!
For our area footing needs to go below frost line.
Is there any reinforcing steel in those drilled foundation shafts? If no, why not?
Really NICE !
Thanks!
It's very big layout and simple to build.
I was expecting it to be near half a million bucks. You motivated me!
Thanks for watching!
Depending on your interior finishes, it could approach that mark.
Don't forget, this was materials only. Add labor and interior and you'll easily be there.
@@stngstrno this is installation included…
I know I'm late to the party but this was a great video. Has lumber gone up in price since this was filmed? Do you think the price is anywhere near the same still?
so making this into a 3-4 bedroom 2-3 bath home how much more money would that cost on top of this? i was looking into building a house like this but from what i see the cost is more then buying a slightly used 4 bedroom home for 200k-300k in the mid west but the barndominium would still cost the same or more and it seems to be inferior to a brick home imo. how will it hold up 100 years from now vs a brick home is the question.