Fantastic Job! My brothers Brando we did was $85 in Missouri in like 2018 (before price spikes). So you did great financially putting in a lot of work! Congratulations honestly! Super helpful video for my plans soon!
@ Thanks. Yes we have been pricing out even a smaller scale barndominum home and was shocked at that investment. Did they compact the ground before starting the pour?
I did a construction loan through my bank and then completed the financing through it on a conventional mortgage through them as well. But there were a few caveats. I can do a video detailing that soon
@@TheHomesteadingAvenger that would be really awesome. I know there can be some difficulties when It comes to the bank not seeing these buildings as a “traditional framing”
I am considering doing a barndo. Is the 2,400 square feet just living space or everything under roof, including the porches? Also, what kind of insulation did you use?
@@larrywright1315 no sir there’s another 900 square feet of porches. We did closed cell and then open cell. That was the recommended way to go down in our area.
@ yeah but you done a lot of the work yourself and still ended up paying $84 a sqft whereas if you done a traditional home and still done as much work as you did it would come out about the same. Don’t get me wrong I’ve been looking into it myself because it’s portrayed as a cheaper alternative but as you dig into it it’s truly no different. So the $150 estimate isn’t accurate because you could save some money on that doing it yourself. But thank you for sharing your experience and knowledge of it.
@ no prob. Keep in mind I paid my brother to help as well and that’s factored in the cost. So if I had someone else take my place I probably would say it would have been $20-25k in labor ish. So still not tooo bad but I understand your point.
Fantastic Job! My brothers Brando we did was $85 in Missouri in like 2018 (before price spikes). So you did great financially putting in a lot of work! Congratulations honestly! Super helpful video for my plans soon!
This is the content I’m here to watch! 🎉
Thanks for sharing. I am sure you have passed critical info to others. 😊
Did you buy a kit for the structure or did you buy it pice by pice from the lumber yard?
You did a great job!
Thanks!
Great job making those cabinets They look fantastic and I’m sure they aren’t made of MDF like crap you could have bought for 5x the price
You have a wonderful home!
Thank you!
Thanks for your video. Did you pour your own cement foundation floor and porch floor?
I did not. I subbed that out.
I wish I could have tho because that was 22k 😭😭😭
@ Thanks. Yes we have been pricing out even a smaller scale barndominum home and was shocked at that investment. Did they compact the ground before starting the pour?
@ yes maam, did that’s and poured footers as well as concrete and gravel for the posts to drain
I like the concept of a bardo. I'm just not sure what happens in twenty years when all those wood posts in the ground have rotted.
We put gravel underneath the post and wrapped the bottom. Guess we will see 🤷♂️😂
Beautiful home. Could you tell me your location and also can you provide a floor plan/layout of bedrooms,, bathroom, etc.
@@CityMedic sure do you have an email I can send you the layout?
Any pics of the layout of th barndo?
You can email me for some if you would like. Obpd1985@gmail.com
Any chance you could explain the type of loan you got for your house? Maybe it’s on another video I haven’t seen yet?
I did a construction loan through my bank and then completed the financing through it on a conventional mortgage through them as well. But there were a few caveats. I can do a video detailing that soon
@@TheHomesteadingAvenger that would be really awesome. I know there can be some difficulties when It comes to the bank not seeing these buildings as a “traditional framing”
I am considering doing a barndo. Is the 2,400 square feet just living space or everything under roof, including the porches? Also, what kind of insulation did you use?
@@larrywright1315 no sir there’s another 900 square feet of porches. We did closed cell and then open cell. That was the recommended way to go down in our area.
Random detail, but is that a Thinkpad laptop?
What state are you in if you don’t mind me asking and how many yards of concrete? I’m assuming you did that as well thanks a lot Subbed!
I subbed out the concrete, let me see if I can find how many yards we needed!
Text said. Always a beer out there. LOL instead of oh there's a deer out there.
I need to proofread those captions 🤦🏼♂️
I can not see the totals, is it $215 and $201 (I don't fell like adding it up) ;)
I budgeted $215,800 but spent $201,015 altogether!
Also feel free to reply with an email and I can send you the spreadsheet
@TheHomesteadingAvenger rad! Good job
not a fan of wood posts in concrete
I can understand your concern. I’m not a fan of the way new houses are being thrown together so quickly either.
$200k is definitely not worth building it.
@@royalmuslim9173 the price of building a regular stick frame house is $150/sq foot in our area so it kind of is here anyway 🤷♂️
@ yeah but you done a lot of the work yourself and still ended up paying $84 a sqft whereas if you done a traditional home and still done as much work as you did it would come out about the same. Don’t get me wrong I’ve been looking into it myself because it’s portrayed as a cheaper alternative but as you dig into it it’s truly no different. So the $150 estimate isn’t accurate because you could save some money on that doing it yourself. But thank you for sharing your experience and knowledge of it.
@ no prob. Keep in mind I paid my brother to help as well and that’s factored in the cost. So if I had someone else take my place I probably would say it would have been $20-25k in labor ish. So still not tooo bad but I understand your point.
Insurance for a traditional is higher also
umm ummm umm
@@MrSteeDoo lol I need to work on my ummms
Did you buy a kit for the structure or did you buy it pice by pice from the lumber yard?
Yes, we bought the kit from Blue Steel in TN for $27k back in July 22