When you hear the word barn, do you immediately associate it with farming or agriculture?
Barns can shelter livestock or store the season’s harvest, but these buildings are not limited to agricultural use. A barn also can provide personal storage and workspace like a garage, thus adding value to your property.
Which type of barn should you choose? There are different styles, and metal and wood options are available. Both of the latter provide shelter and storage but deciding between the two comes down to your goals, budget, application, and personal preference.
Metal barns provide some inherent advantages over wood. Today’s steel barns offer all that a wood barn can offer at a lower price point, with higher durability and reduced maintenance. You can design your steel barn to suit your needs and choose from a variety of colors, facades, shapes, and sizes.
Two basic metal barns are available: arch-style steel barns and rigid-frame steel barns.
Arch-style barns, also known as Quonset huts, are durable, affordable, and easy to assemble. But their rounded construction offers less square footage than rigid-frame steel barns. When ample storage and headspace are the goals, a rigid-frame steel barn is a better choice.
A rigid-frame steel barn presents more usable space and ample headspace. These prefab buildings withstand strong winds and heavy snow loads, offering up to 300 feet of clear span space.
Rigid-frame steel buildings come in a variety of sizes, from small metal barns the size of a single-car garage to large metal barns with stalls for horses and livestock, metal barns with living quarters on the second floor, or even spacious horseback riding arenas.
When comparing wood and metal barns, the latter offers some distinct advantages.
Durability: A metal barn is durable and lasts for many years. These buildings resist pests and rot and can stand up to extreme weather. Wood cracks and rots in harsh weather, as well as attracting pests. The shingled roofs of wood buildings require constant repair, while the metal roofs of prefabricated steel barns eliminate shingle repairs.
The cost of your metal barn will vary depending on its design.
A common design is a barn divided into two or three sections: the main center section with a section on the right and left. This barn design costs more than a smaller single-section design. A clear span of 40 feet will cost less than an 80-foot clear span.
A metal barn costs $10,000 to $20,000 for a 12- to 20-foot-wide barn; $25,000 to $30,000 for a 26-foot to 30-foot-wide metal barn; and over $40,000 for a commercial size barn. Windows and doors, electrical and plumbing are extra costs.
Wood barns cost $45 to $65 per square foot to build. That price does not include electrical or plumbing. However, you can purchase preassembled wood barn kits for around half the price.
Insulation adds to the price of a metal barn. The increase in price depends on the insulation you choose, who does the installing, the building size, and the areas within the building you will insulate.
The cost of spray foam insulation averages $1 per-square-foot per inch of thickness. One-inch of spray foam offers around an R-7 insulation value. Getting to an R-25 insulation value requires at least 3.5 inches of spray foam at a price of $3.50 per square foot. With fiberglass insulation, an R-25, 8-inch-thick batt averages .85 cents per square foot.
A metal barn meets all the needs of a wooden barn. It can shelter livestock and store your harvest while adding value to your property. But unlike wooden barns, a steel barn costs less upfront and requires less maintenance over its lifetime.