Interesting how you layer the top container on its side. I do see the benefit. If the door is easy to open well then it’s all good. Solid concrete slab sounds like the way to go. This summer I am building a small one. Floor with drains and a few windows to look out maybe. Not sure yet. Thanks for sharing. Great job.
Overall, I think it looks great. If it we me, I would probably utilize the space above the ceiling, below the roof for storage. You could put some light flooring down and either build a staircase or even pull down stairs. There is a lot of space up there you could use. I couldn't tell what the joists were so that might limit the weight capacity, but I would look into it.
I'm loving the shop man! having built a kinda similar building, but with a different configuration (two boxes, trusses, etc) ... I love seeing your choices. Good stuff man!
Turned out nice man, you do you. I would now use the upper door as a roof and angle back to support and weld in place permanent. I see the benefit of the upper being welded to all and also the 9 1/2 feet instead of the 8 wide. I'm in the mindset that I can build a metal 60x40 myself but man the price of everything is crazy.......Cheers
Looking good there. It's tuff to tell from the video how far those rafters extend over the outside containers. But if they do it seems that the end of the roof on the container inside isn't weight bearing except at the front doors of the building. Almost like you could attach the top of the container roof to the rafters and remove the center poles. Just a thought .
Are those hi cube containers? Only downsides I see is ceiling height. If you could of done metal trusses instead of wood to have a higher ceiling that would of been amazing. Love the layout for a storage barn. Good work.
Looks like you paid $18,800 for the exterior framing, and 640 sq ft of wood floors. Looks like 112 ft of exterior wall. The xtra concrete flooring would have cost you $7000, so it looks like you paid $100 a linear foot for exterior walls. if your shop is 28x40 = 1120sqft looks like you paid $36sqft for the building (minus concrete/ground prep & racking). You could have had a Steel I-beam building (non tubular) for $33sqft, and it would have added value to your property. Tubular steel is half the price of steel I-beam...so $17sqft.
@@clarencevogel6039 this building is 48x40. Not 24x48. The top container is also 9.5x40 as well. Also got a quote from a steel building company. Was more expensive so I went this direction
Looks great. Thanks for walking us through it.
No problem Thanks for watching!
Interesting how you layer the top container on its side. I do see the benefit. If the door is easy to open well then it’s all good. Solid concrete slab sounds like the way to go.
This summer I am building a small one. Floor with drains and a few windows to look out maybe. Not sure yet. Thanks for sharing. Great job.
Overall, I think it looks great. If it we me, I would probably utilize the space above the ceiling, below the roof for storage. You could put some light flooring down and either build a staircase or even pull down stairs. There is a lot of space up there you could use. I couldn't tell what the joists were so that might limit the weight capacity, but I would look into it.
@@goptools thank you I will
well done, great job, 😃thanks for sharing
Thank you
I'm loving the shop man! having built a kinda similar building, but with a different configuration (two boxes, trusses, etc) ... I love seeing your choices. Good stuff man!
@@metaspencer thank you!
Turned out nice man, you do you. I would now use the upper door as a roof and angle back to support and weld in place permanent. I see the benefit of the upper being welded to all and also the 9 1/2 feet instead of the 8 wide. I'm in the mindset that I can build a metal 60x40 myself but man the price of everything is crazy.......Cheers
Good idea and thank you good luck!
Nice job, great idea.
Thank you!
Looking good there. It's tuff to tell from the video how far those rafters extend over the outside containers. But if they do it seems that the end of the roof on the container inside isn't weight bearing except at the front doors of the building. Almost like you could attach the top of the container roof to the rafters and remove the center poles. Just a thought .
Are those hi cube containers? Only downsides I see is ceiling height. If you could of done metal trusses instead of wood to have a higher ceiling that would of been amazing. Love the layout for a storage barn. Good work.
Yes high cube. Everything I have fits besides the loader, f750 and komatsu pc78
Nice job . I believe you could of built a permanent metal building for the same price. Or pole barn garage for around 80k
Thanks and yes that sounds about right
High Fives America! 😎
Cool concept and great video!
Thank you!
I like it, build me a gym
What would be the price difference if you just put up a pole barn of that size ? Thanks
What size container?
Also add some sort of siding on the front
@@FloridaFan6262 we did. 4 40 foot high cubes
This is probably a dumb question but do you need a permit to build something like this?
@@nelsonestepan3622 I am not sure! Depends on the town probably
Sorry got itlol
Looks like you paid $18,800 for the exterior framing, and 640 sq ft of wood floors. Looks like 112 ft of exterior wall.
The xtra concrete flooring would have cost you $7000, so it looks like you paid $100 a linear foot for exterior walls.
if your shop is 28x40 = 1120sqft looks like you paid $36sqft for the building (minus concrete/ground prep & racking).
You could have had a Steel I-beam building (non tubular) for $33sqft, and it would have added value to your property.
Tubular steel is half the price of steel I-beam...so $17sqft.
@@clarencevogel6039 this building is 48x40. Not 24x48. The top container is also 9.5x40 as well. Also got a quote from a steel building company. Was more expensive so I went this direction