We Do Storage Buildings Right!
When Ben first started working at his Uncle's side in the 1990's, storage buildings were one of the first things he was taught. He has perfected the practice and has taught his team well how to build them. In fact, in the images below, you can see where we assembled this storage building in a single day from the ground up. Let us know how big or small you need the storage unit to be and we can make it happen. Take a look at the circle in the middle to see what the finished storage shed looked like, and that is just one of numerous examples. Notice that it is positioned on concrete pavers to keep the wood of the building off the ground. That prevents moisture damage to the base from rain.
In the next example, because of a sloping yard, the concrete blocks in the back are higher than those in the front. The black great dane shown in the picture was crawling on her side underneath the building, as the owner described it, engaging in her Special Forces training. Even when the owner was beside the building telling Ben that she does this, which is hard to believe, since it is such a tight space and she is 120 pounds in size, a dust cloud started coming from beneath the storage shed and out popped the great danes smiling face from underneath the building. Ben framed the area and affixed a wire mesh fencing on the back side of the frame to keep her out, much to her disappointment. Home Re-Imagined's great work put an abrupt end to the tactical training this great dane engaged in on a daily basis.
Notice the ramp that leads up to the barn doors in the back ... That allows the riding lawn mower to drive up into the shed. The end furtherest away from the shed is affixed to the ground with galvinized steel so that no wood is in contact with the ground. Brilliant work, needless to say.
We Welcome the Challenge of Building Other Out Buildings!
In the image below you can see the red barn in which the horse feed, hay, tack and saddles are kept. The horses lived in the three connected pastures, which were nicely wooded for their shade. However, for the cold winter months the owner wanted a way to get them in out of the cold rain and snow . . . Home Re-Imagined came to the rescue. As you can see in the images below, the built three horse stalls for the three horses there, connecting the new stalls to the existing barn. This provided a 36 foot long stall for each horse, with the first 12 feet being under the roof that Home Re-Imagined built and the other 24 feet extending outward into the pasture. Gates were positioned at the end to be able to secure the horses in their stalls when necessary (such as when pasture fertilization occurred and the horses needed to be limited to the other two pastures for the time being). Electrical outlets enabled heated water buckets to be positioned at the front of each stall for the freezing winter nights and days. Now, each of the horses has a stall he or she considers home, thanks to Home Re-Imagined.