Going to try something here. We'll see what the response is.
I spent 4 summers after HS, building pole barns for a national company, Wick Ag Buildings, Mazomanie, WI. These were precut packages, typically arriving in two flat-bed semi-truck loads. At the end of that time of my life, I was super-fit, and endowed with a body of knowledge that earned me a job offer of Crew Lead. Instead, I went to vet school...
Anyway, I'm going to work through the process of planning and building a typical pole barn shed, from start to finish, in a half-dozen installments. For your comment!
First installment:
Planning, layout, and pole-setting.
At Wick, all our buildings were built with 9-foot bays. This allows 10-foot purlins to be used, overlapping the ends of them for strength. At a minimum, you're going to want a large rolling door in a sidewall, or a pair of sliding doors meeting at the center of an end wall. You'll also want a walk door. Make your sliding doors as wide as you can. Twelve to eighteen feet wide is not too much. For the pole missing in the door opening, we used a 2x12 yellow pine triple header, with a stub pole sandwiched in the header span to land the truss against.
Also, it's a lot cheaper to go "up" rather than "out", so don't be bashful about sidewall height - 16 feet is good, and gives you potential for loft space. You can use "filon" (translucent fiberglass siding) for the top 3 or 4 feet of the sidewalls to let light in.
On an average shed (60x90), a 5-man crew can lay out the building and set all the poles in about 6 hours.
Once your pad is prepared, lay out the building by erecting batter boards back from each corner of the building. These give you a place to attach string lines, and adjust them as needed. On pad preparation, the less fill, the better off you are, because fresh fill is never as dense as the original surface, and pole purchase can be thus compromised. Your floor is also likely to settle over time if it's built on top of fresh fill.
First thing is to get the string lines representing the building perimeter squared up. Measure the diagonals and keep adjusting string lines until the pairs of diagonals, widths, and lengths are all identical. Now, from a corner, measure your 9-foot spacing for the poles and use a Sharpie to mark the CL of each pole on the string. We used small squares of cardboard held in place on the ground with a nail at the center point of each pole. These are your targets for the auger point.
After drilling your holes, start setting poles at the corners. You want to nail a scrap block of 2-by on each outer face of the corner poles and set the outer face of that block right on the string line. When digging holes and preparing poles, some of the best things you can do are:
- Drill your holes plumb. Not as simple as it sounds, because an auger on a three-point hitch will tend to move in an arc as it goes down. When drilling, just move the tractor forward a few inches a couple times as the auger goes down.
- Place a concrete "cookie" in the bottom of each hole to set the pole on. These will greatly resist settling of the poles.
- Before setting poles, nail "cheek blocks" on two opposite sides of each pole, near the bottom. Use some stout treated lumber for cheek blocks and nail them on with 20D ring shank nails. These will improve the ability of the pole to resist pulling out of the hole (wind) after the shed is built.
- Just before backfilling your poles, dump a bag of concrete mix down the hole. Just dump it in dry. It will absorb moisture from the soil and cure on its own.
- When tamping poles, tamp the bottoms thoroughly. Because, it is critical to secure the bottom of the pole in position. A little bit of dirt, tamp it tight, a little more dirt, tamp it tight. And on. If you don't do that, and the pole leans over, the bottom of the pole will move laterally, screwing up your pole placement.
-After the corner poles are set, on each of them, drop 4 braces from head height to the ground to brace the pole plumb until it's framed in.
- When you set the rest of the poles (the poles between the corners), remember to set them back 1.5" from the string line. [Safer, for a straight wall, to NOT try to set your poles right on the string line.]
[Back in The Day, our poles were treated with pentachlorophenol which was finally "cancelled" by EPA in 2022.] We used rough-cut (full 6") treated yellow pine poles.
Typically, poles with inferior treatment will rot off right at ground level. If I'm not confident in the treatment, I will soak the poles thoroughly with used motor oil near ground level after they are set. I've also gone to the extreme of wrapping untreated poles in roofing felt before setting them.
Next installment - girting up, finishing framing in readiness for trusses. Typically, for our crew, Day 2 was for swinging trusses.
-Paul
I spent 4 summers after HS, building pole barns for a national company, Wick Ag Buildings, Mazomanie, WI. These were precut packages, typically arriving in two flat-bed semi-truck loads. At the end of that time of my life, I was super-fit, and endowed with a body of knowledge that earned me a job offer of Crew Lead. Instead, I went to vet school...
Anyway, I'm going to work through the process of planning and building a typical pole barn shed, from start to finish, in a half-dozen installments. For your comment!
First installment:
Planning, layout, and pole-setting.
At Wick, all our buildings were built with 9-foot bays. This allows 10-foot purlins to be used, overlapping the ends of them for strength. At a minimum, you're going to want a large rolling door in a sidewall, or a pair of sliding doors meeting at the center of an end wall. You'll also want a walk door. Make your sliding doors as wide as you can. Twelve to eighteen feet wide is not too much. For the pole missing in the door opening, we used a 2x12 yellow pine triple header, with a stub pole sandwiched in the header span to land the truss against.
Also, it's a lot cheaper to go "up" rather than "out", so don't be bashful about sidewall height - 16 feet is good, and gives you potential for loft space. You can use "filon" (translucent fiberglass siding) for the top 3 or 4 feet of the sidewalls to let light in.
On an average shed (60x90), a 5-man crew can lay out the building and set all the poles in about 6 hours.
Once your pad is prepared, lay out the building by erecting batter boards back from each corner of the building. These give you a place to attach string lines, and adjust them as needed. On pad preparation, the less fill, the better off you are, because fresh fill is never as dense as the original surface, and pole purchase can be thus compromised. Your floor is also likely to settle over time if it's built on top of fresh fill.
First thing is to get the string lines representing the building perimeter squared up. Measure the diagonals and keep adjusting string lines until the pairs of diagonals, widths, and lengths are all identical. Now, from a corner, measure your 9-foot spacing for the poles and use a Sharpie to mark the CL of each pole on the string. We used small squares of cardboard held in place on the ground with a nail at the center point of each pole. These are your targets for the auger point.
After drilling your holes, start setting poles at the corners. You want to nail a scrap block of 2-by on each outer face of the corner poles and set the outer face of that block right on the string line. When digging holes and preparing poles, some of the best things you can do are:
- Drill your holes plumb. Not as simple as it sounds, because an auger on a three-point hitch will tend to move in an arc as it goes down. When drilling, just move the tractor forward a few inches a couple times as the auger goes down.
- Place a concrete "cookie" in the bottom of each hole to set the pole on. These will greatly resist settling of the poles.
- Before setting poles, nail "cheek blocks" on two opposite sides of each pole, near the bottom. Use some stout treated lumber for cheek blocks and nail them on with 20D ring shank nails. These will improve the ability of the pole to resist pulling out of the hole (wind) after the shed is built.
- Just before backfilling your poles, dump a bag of concrete mix down the hole. Just dump it in dry. It will absorb moisture from the soil and cure on its own.
- When tamping poles, tamp the bottoms thoroughly. Because, it is critical to secure the bottom of the pole in position. A little bit of dirt, tamp it tight, a little more dirt, tamp it tight. And on. If you don't do that, and the pole leans over, the bottom of the pole will move laterally, screwing up your pole placement.
-After the corner poles are set, on each of them, drop 4 braces from head height to the ground to brace the pole plumb until it's framed in.
- When you set the rest of the poles (the poles between the corners), remember to set them back 1.5" from the string line. [Safer, for a straight wall, to NOT try to set your poles right on the string line.]
[Back in The Day, our poles were treated with pentachlorophenol which was finally "cancelled" by EPA in 2022.] We used rough-cut (full 6") treated yellow pine poles.
Typically, poles with inferior treatment will rot off right at ground level. If I'm not confident in the treatment, I will soak the poles thoroughly with used motor oil near ground level after they are set. I've also gone to the extreme of wrapping untreated poles in roofing felt before setting them.
Next installment - girting up, finishing framing in readiness for trusses. Typically, for our crew, Day 2 was for swinging trusses.
-Paul