thrashingcows
Senior Member
Wow.
Just where the hell in B.C. are you?
In the regional district outside Prince George. A little over half way to Alaska border from the 49th. ;)
Wow.
Just where the hell in B.C. are you?
Like here?In the regional district outside Prince George. A little over half way to Alaska border from the 49th. ;)
Sounds like the inner city but he's up around the North Pole these days. Wow, some of that is extreme for the middle of nowhere
You got that right, was discussing things with the wife and perhaps the reason they have "outlawed" the pole barn type of construction is due to the fact that they charge me certain permits fees based on the overall "finished" cost of the shop/garage. So having to pour a concrete foundation significantly increase my finished costs, thus allowing them to rake in a bit more money.
I have no idea if this is worthwhile, but it may not hurt to check with the steel building manufacturers. Many of them claim to have the blueprints and approvals available for certain areas... I would make certain the blueprints got approval before investing, but maybe it would open up other options for you.I had hoped to build a 40x64x16 foot ceilings....but seems like it will most likely be a 32x48, or maybe a 40x48 with 12' ceilings....will have to see.
You're going to need some engineering drawings for buildings that size. A 40x48 building presents roughly 2000 sqft of roof, which in PG needs to carry a snow load of 3.8 kn/sqm (80lbs/sqft). This amounts to a live load of 80 tons. A truss designed for this live load and spanning 40' won't be cheap to build and won't be easy to raise it 12 to 16 feet to install without popping connector plates.I had hoped to build a 40x64x16 foot ceilings....but seems like it will most likely be a 32x48, or maybe a 40x48 with 12' ceilings....will have to see.