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Gary Carmichael
11-19-2012, 04:27 PM
Well since there is not much going on, right now thought I would post some photo's of my pole barn I built for the bus. Did not spend a lot of bucks but it has heat, bathroom and other good things. How about the rest of you guys show us some photo's

Gary Carmichael
11-19-2012, 06:42 PM
Sorry show more bus than barn, oh well.

dale farley
11-19-2012, 06:56 PM
Looks like a nice barn Gary. I have a 50' barn with no bus. I also have no heat or air, so you are a long way ahead of me.

Gil_J
11-19-2012, 09:22 PM
Gary,

I like it!

Seabyrd
11-19-2012, 10:50 PM
That's really nice Gary.... well done !!





Well since there is not much going on, right now thought I would post some photo's of my pole barn I built for the bus. Did not spend a lot of bucks but it has heat, bathroom and other good things. How about the rest of you guys show us some photo's

garyde
11-19-2012, 11:04 PM
Very Nice Gary. Beautiful Coach as well! Tell us some stats on the Barn. Width, height, length. Looks like an engineered Frame with Wood siding. Did you install a pit or do you have a ramp to get under the bus. Is the slab six inches or more. and so on.

otto
11-20-2012, 08:59 AM
Gary, love the barn. This is a very timely discussion since we are looking at buildings right now. Yesterday via e-mail came the first quote on a metal building. No sides, concrete footings, no concrete floor, and obviously no heating was estimated to cost $32,800! OUCH! Anyone have cost estimates of non-steel buildings?

Oh, by the way Gary, I noticed that you hail from SW Virginia, God's country. That may be so but we live in the sandhills area of eastern North Carolina. God may visit SW Virginia but he lives in our part of eastern North Carolina!

Otto

Gary Carmichael
11-20-2012, 12:27 PM
Otto, come on now! you know god is all knowing, and I think it might get a tad to hot for him down there, It's cooler here and he can look down on things so to speak, I just sold my house in Southport this spring. Now for barn spec's. I had a D-3 cat dozer and prepared the site myself, contractor did the rest with my help " a little " Slab 4000psi with wire and # 4 rebar, I have two floor drains, Installed a roll up door, Used sizzor truss so I could walk on top of bus with out bending or crawling, I used T-111 for the outside and strips every 16" to give it a barn look and on the side that you can't see in the photo's are two fake barn doors, 25yr metal roof grey, door is 14' with remote openers, building is 50' x 20' I can put the slides out inside with no problem getting around, 3" insulation, water and sewer and full hook ups outside for guest. The site was originally an old home site and I utilized the well and the septic tank. I have a iron removal unit on well 12 pm iron and a deionizer for spotless wash. Now all this was 28,500. I did have to pay for the roll up door which was 2400.00. Now if I had it to do over it would have been 30x60 with a pit! Construction was done in 2006, also the barn is heated, with three rows of lights one in the center of roof and the other two on the sides lighting is very good we had to play with this to get it just right. Time to construct one month

Gary Carmichael
11-20-2012, 12:31 PM
I forgot the slab is 6" and 8" at the entrance ramp setting on 6" of ABC compacted

sswindle14260
11-20-2012, 12:50 PM
Gary--What type of heating system do you have in the building?

Gary Carmichael
11-20-2012, 08:54 PM
LP gas heaters 2ea with thermo controlled fans, it gets cold here in the winter 0 or below several times heaters keep it at 55 even with those temps. We are usually at our place in Riverbend in the winter but this year will be an exception our 15 year old lab can't travel any more, so we will stay here on the mountain till the time comes. Gary

otto
11-20-2012, 09:15 PM
Gary, Thank you for the information. It certainly gives me much needed guidance. About 10 years ago we put up a 50X40 metal building that would have been perfect for our RV needs. At that time I had zero plans on ever purchasing an RV(Sometime I'll tell you our RV rental adventure that we thought permanently excluded us from the RV world. It is one of those stories that must be told in person). The only problem with our metal building is the height! It is a couple of feet too low and cannot be changed.

We love Southport but nothing beats the Pinehurst area. Most of the time they answer the phone at Pinehurst Resort with, "Welcome to Pinehurst where every day is Christmas."

Gary Carmichael
11-21-2012, 07:51 AM
I still get a monthly update on The Old North State,by my subscription to our state magazine, a class publication! Gary

Gil_J
11-21-2012, 04:27 PM
Okay, I'm curious. There are a many metal building companies. What is a ball park cost to have a bus barn built?

Sticks
11-21-2012, 04:50 PM
Very nice bus barn. Ours is a pole barn as well. Constructed by Mortan buildings to match our horse barn and arena. It measures 30' by 60' and has in floor heat. drain but no water or bathroom since it's just next door in the stall barn. Unfortunately it was considerably north of $30,000.

Gary Carmichael
11-21-2012, 05:53 PM
Bob I see you also have a 2005 Liberty H3-45 what is your coach number if I may Ask? Mine is 576 Gary

Sticks
11-23-2012, 03:47 PM
698A??? is only number I can see on the sales slip. Haven't gone out to check side of coach. Been " home bound " with awful case of bronchitis past three days. If this number doesn't make sense I'll go out and look at coach. Unfortunately the wind is 30 mph with wind chills in teens. ( ugh- time to head south ).

Gary Carmichael
11-23-2012, 05:45 PM
BOb, your barn is finished out much better than mine. A good looking coach barn! 30x60 seems to be a good size, Hope you get better soon If you were in this area a little shine would get rid of that pesky problem Gary

Liam
11-28-2012, 11:48 AM
Coincidental timing on this thread as I am frantically trying to finish my bus barn before snow. We live in a farming community with 2-acre lots on the edges of farms so I wanted the barn to really fit in with the architecture of the the area. I also Googled a lot of bus barn pictures and most look really tall and skinny so we decided to add a section on one side for our cars. The asymmetric design is a lot like "crib sheds" which have room for a tractor in the tall part and corn storage in the smaller shed part. Someone in the next town had the Amish build a nice car barn that I liked so I re-used a lot of the design ideas. The first picture is the finished car barn in the next town. The second picture is the front view of my 90% finished Bus Barn. The next shot is the view from my house. The barn is a 16 x 50 Bus section and a 10 x 40 car section. To be historically correct, the front of the barn is 1 x 12 pine board and batten siding. The sides and rear are matching Hardie cement board and batten for low maintenance. The one visual trick I did was to disguise the fact that the entire front of the bus barn opens up with 14' tall double doors hinged at the side posts. The white trimmed doors a fake applied trim. I notched the battens which run over the real hinges to further hide the hinges. You can see that in the last photo. I will apply one more batten nailed only on one side of the remaining seam you see, and the batten will open with the door and be a weather seal when it is closed. I need to fabricate the faux "ventilators" as the Amish call them (the louvered windows you see in the first picture). I have 50A service. Wanted but did not install a pit as I was advised the code inspectors go nuts about pits with Osha safety and hazardous waste type concerns. Plus, our whole neighborhood is a huge limestone ledge so you can't plant a tulip without dynamite it seems some days.

dale farley
11-28-2012, 12:49 PM
Nice job Liam. Very practical and fits in nicely with the landscape. Best of all, it will keep your CC out of the weather.

Gary Carmichael
11-29-2012, 08:45 AM
Good looking barn!