That seems lot a lot for a plain 30 x 36 pole barn. Here in South Central PA I have two quotes for less then 40,000 including the crew to construct the building and concrete floor.
In Oregon everything is overpriced. In 2018 I originally got a quote from the same company at about $35k. I never expected it to go up so much so fast.
Works out to about $55sq ft ($60,000/1080sq ft). More work might be desired to create an all season work space (heat/improved insulation/exterior concrete). May be the least expensive building method, but certainly not cheap. I'm not sure of how much re-sale value add is offered by a back-yard pole building. I recently sold a home that included a 900sq ft pole barn. The barn was older but dry, heated and useful. The appraised value add for the building was very low and no where near replacement cost; almost like an appraiser after thought.
All very true. The building was built for me to use and enjoy. On our last house we upgraded before selling to give the new buyer more value. This time I spent money on myself. Just put in power for about $1800 with mr snd my son, buddy doing the labor. Much better than the $4k+ for the electrician with us still doing the excavation
That’s great compared to here. I’ve got a buddy who retired to Arkansas. So much more home and acreage for the money. I might look there myself when my wife retires.
@@markw8191These people that say these low quotes never actually have one built to see how the costs add up, and most are quoting the lowest gauge metal prices.
Thank you for sharing……beautiful building. Enjoy it and certainly your dog approves…..enjoy that beer and view!
That seems lot a lot for a plain 30 x 36 pole barn. Here in South Central PA I have two quotes for less then 40,000 including the crew to construct the building and concrete floor.
Damn, I got a quote for 27k for a 30x40x12 that's with it completely done concrete, insulation and electrical
In Oregon everything is overpriced. In 2018 I originally got a quote from the same company at about $35k. I never expected it to go up so much so fast.
was your quote for 27k from this year? what part of the country if i might ask?
@@theinkroom5642 south Alabama and yes just recently
@@theinkroom5642 a base kit without concrete or insulation just the building is 13k doesn't include installation though
Concrete is the kicker...do without
Works out to about $55sq ft ($60,000/1080sq ft). More work might be desired to create an all season work space (heat/improved insulation/exterior concrete). May be the least expensive building method, but certainly not cheap. I'm not sure of how much re-sale value add is offered by a back-yard pole building. I recently sold a home that included a 900sq ft pole barn. The barn was older but dry, heated and useful. The appraised value add for the building was very low and no where near replacement cost; almost like an appraiser after thought.
All very true. The building was built for me to use and enjoy. On our last house we upgraded before selling to give the new buyer more value. This time I spent money on myself. Just put in power for about $1800 with mr snd my son, buddy doing the labor. Much better than the $4k+ for the electrician with us still doing the excavation
what size posts did you go with
How did you decide on the size, how much did the cost increase as the size went up if you checked thag
Arkansas 30x40x12 with concrete ,insulation, two windows 3x5,one 36inch door,10x10 rollup,you keep all trash 27k
That’s great compared to here. I’ve got a buddy who retired to Arkansas. So much more home and acreage for the money. I might look there myself when my wife retires.
@@markw8191These people that say these low quotes never actually have one built to see how the costs add up, and most are quoting the lowest gauge metal prices.
Are the post on 10 ft centers or 8 ft centers?
why would you need 16t high walls, with such a low door height?
To add a loft and a 2 post lift
Storage
Nice size
Why did you go so high?
So I can add a two post lift