DIY 24 x 24 Pole Build Garage / Barndominium
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- Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
- #onemanarmy #how to #garage
Here is an update of the last two months. I started this one man 24 x 24 pole barn garage build back in September by pulling the permits. This is kind of a “How to build your own 24 x24 2 car garage or Barndominium by yourself” haha. I hope to get this finished by January or February! This video also touches on how much it costs to build a 24’x24’ garage or tiny house yourself. Before I started this project I was quoted between $54,000 and $59,000 and it would take 4 months. My goal is to build this garage by myself, for under $25,000, and be done in 4 months. At the time that I shot this video my expense spreadsheet in excel had a subtotal of $11,300 so we are doing great! Thanks for watching subscriber if you’d like!
Big shout out to my neighbors Chris and his cousin John who letting me borrow the tools that surprisingly I didn’t have. The regular drop ins are encouraging and the John Deere 4115 HST was fun!
Same thing with the Toro Trx-26 trencher!
Music by Joakim Karud - Canals
Barndominium
Poles
Piers
Piles
Piling
Heck yeah! Congrats on the new house, congrats on the baby coming! It’s pretty awesome that you‘ve been buildikg. That garage all by yourself, you’re a man of many skills and I’m def lookin forward to seeing Whatchu got in store for the future! You def have me motivated to get my stuff together 🔥🔥🔥
Much thanks brother!
So fresh
Nice work Tom! Congratulations on all the additions (home and family)! Once you get that shop built completely, I'll have to come visit ya!
Thanks Justin! Always welcome brother!
Congrats, Tom. Just now seeing this. You are right to be proud.
Nice work, appreciate the motivation speech
This is awesome! keep it up man!
Update video?! Would love to see final product and know final cost!! I am building my house with this as my inspo video🤣 thank you so much for posting this!
I am hoping to drop one here in the coming week!
Awesome work! I’ll be touch for ideas for my new car!
Hell yea man! I’m down!
Sickkkkk
I got a couple of quotes to build a 24x24 garage recently too. I go quotes in the $54-60k range. My foundation is already done.. so I'm just gonna build it myself in the spring. I'm pretty sure I can build it for under $20k. Anyway.. good job man.
For sure! And thank you!
If it helps, you will need:
120 studs for walls with double headers and two 8’H x9’W doors.
Two rolls of sill seal
20 sheets for the walls 8’ high
25 sheets for 10’ high walls
32 total sheets if you go cape style like mine.
13 trusses total (24” centers 35 psi load) 2 of which are gable ends (cost me $2800…shop around)
I used one roll of 9x150’ house wrap
30 roof sheets of 5/8 (19/32) cdx and 100 clips (24” centers require clips for 5/8 in my area)
I sourced siding through ABC supply wholesaler and went with plygem .044 thick cost me $2300 (big box stores are cheaper as they sell only .042)
@@thestateofreal2533 Thx for that info. I'm probably not gonna use a truss system. I'm planning to do joists for a second floor space.. and use a ridge beam and roof rafters. I'm also gonna use zip board sheathing.. and I'm gonna log side it to match my house.
@@randomstuffwithjoe sounds amazing!
Awesome job bud, I'm going to attempt this same idea for my little family. I was wondering if you had a blue print as for parts and what used that can help me along the way? Let me know bud.
Thanks 😊
I have a blue print of all the trusses but not the actual structure. I used sketchup to design the exterior and look of the gables and wrote a materials list.
I can look for a place to post public plans and do it one day.
Ductless Heat pump ,if insulated properly .
That’s the plan! I was thinking two heads and trying to get around 36-40k BTU’s. Thoughts?
Nice work. Whatd it cost ya at the end to build if ya don't mind me asking. I'm in the need for a garage myself. Just kinda trying to get ball park numbers of what it'd cost me to do so all finished
I have to do an update video yet but I’m at $17k and some change shingled, sided, windowed, doors, electric, pluming to include the machine rentals and I just finished installing metal siding on the ceiling inside.
Oh, sure. It's only the WIFEY's extra stuff that will need storing. Elevator is the right idea though. I had a piano warehouse on my property in Arkansas and it had a manual elevator that worked with counterweights and was great. Look up designs. Doesn't have to be hydraulic or even electric.
You know it! I thought about doing counterweights initially but I decided on the electric hoist idea because it seemed like more work to keep weights around for heavier objects besides myself and I’d have to build the structure to withstand twice the weight.
@@thestateofreal2533 Yes. This was for upright pianos in their heyday. I'm sill amazed that homes have been so slow to adopt elevators.. The amount of space wasted in staircases in a modest home is ridiculous, plus it ruins isolating 1st floor air from 2nd when only one need be heated or cooled most times. But, I digress . . . ;)
Hey, love the garage! Building a 24x24 this spring, I was wondering if you had to put an enginered slab down for that or just regular? If you still have the plans, it would be great save me 500 bucks lol.
At the end of the day it depends on if you pull a permit or not. Places (states, townships, county’s) have different requirement. Im in PA a stones throw from Hershey and for the most part my township will accept hand drawl plans on the building permit. When talking about slabs there are two types: floating and a slab on foundation (has a footer). Typically floating slabs, unless engineered properly, you don’t build on-top of in Pa because frost heaving causing them to move and crack under load. Most pole barn or post buildings have a floating slab. Floating slabs do not need to be engineered because they are not supporting a large load and typically end up being cheaper. I have to figured out a way to post my plans someplace.
@THE STATE OF REAL I kind of figured you had slab on foundation but wasn't sure. I'm in Cape Breton Nova Scotia and with the frost here going 4 feet, I was kinda figuring that if I went with the same design, I would have to go slab on foundation Most 24x24s here just do floating slabs. But again I built a 28x46 for a friend of mine with a 28x14 foot loft and slab was just floating. It was a rebuilt his 3 door burnt.
@@CraigGatza you can do floating as well out frost line in PA is 3ft
@THE STATE OF REAL yep just prob going to do the 24x24 on floating and next year add 16x20 on the back. One for toys one for the shop
@@thestateofreal2533 I was asking about the 2story because it would be a great place to store lumber
Looking good my friend, so walls are 10 feet , is your roof around 12 feet?
Walls are 10 feet to the bottom of the roof trusses. As an after thought I probably could have gone 12 feet tall so I could put bigger doors and drive camper into the garage but that wasn’t my intention.
And thanks brother! Now only if I could get the garage doors. Ordered Wayne dalton doors back in early November from Lowes…they were supposed to be delivered in February…delivery has been pushed back until April. I just have tarps over the doors right now.
Did you paint those posts with something black for rot before you poured the concrete?
Yes I used 3 coats of driveway sealer!
May have missed it but what is the pitch, how much floor space in the loft and is that a specific truss style that you would ask for? Thanks.
If my memory serves me right I believe I ordered 10/12 pitch trusses 26’ with 60-70 lb per square foot bottom cord with a 24’ free span. This made the loft height 7’8”.
My suggestion is shop around with local truss companies and tell them what you need and they will send you blue prints. Tell them what you are seeing other places price wise to see if they will compete. These dimensions and load will change with snow load requirements based on your area which these manufacturers will help you determine over the phone. 60-70 lbs/sqft was communicated to me to be enough to have a long term living space but not enough to store a grand pianos haha
Loft dimensions were 24’x14.7’ so roughly 348sqft
@@thestateofreal2533 no snow load here in S GA but thanks for the information!
That’s good news for you…cheaper trusses! No problem!
Where do you locate? How much is the foundation?
Pennsylvania and the slab was $4,000
wondering why you have what looks like 8x8 pt posts ?
These are 6x6 pt post 8ft on center the whole way around. Static loading and building code requires a minimum of 6x6 pt post.
@@thestateofreal2533 for what ? u got a wall under the trusses.
@@steve123261 a couple reasons. There is no foundation under my concrete slab.
In a pole barn style buildings the 6x6 post are the foundation and are buried 36-48” deep so the punch plug and post are below the frost line.
If you were to place the structure on a slab here in PA, you would deal with frost heaving issues long term making the structure unsafe to occupy. Frost heaving can cause slabs to shift and topple walls.
In order to build a roof supported by the exterior walls (placed on top of a foundation) the header plate has to be doubled. In order to support the walls with studs 16” IC.
Updated on the project?
It’s funny you asked because my sister did also. The garage doors have been delayed and delayed and delayed. I had hoping to do an update video once they are installed. I’m supposed to receive them on May 26th