Now that my house build is at least at a state of stasis, I'm thinking about the shop build. Per the county I have about 1200sf to work with, and must be less tall than the house so about 20ft to peak.
I have been getting quotes for 30x40 engineered steel buildings (red iron I-beam construction), and the pricing for the building itself seems favorable. Does anyone here have experience with building and/or working out of one of these buildings? Any tips or advise?
The pros that I can see include speed and efficiency. I got a ballpark of $6/sf for erection, and the nice part is once the erection is done, the roofing and siding are also already done. Also, this involves very little labor on my end. This sounds appealing after the last year of slogging on the house. Basically I would need to hire the excavator, a foundation crew, and the building erectors, and then I would have a dried-in building that I could start using while waiting for more funds to do interior finishes.
But, I keep coming back to traditional 2x6 stick framing, because that's what I'm used to. This would also look nicer, as I can get an 8/12 scissor truss that would get me a decent interior height on a 10ft wall, which would match my home better and look less like an industrial crackerbox. A 28x40 footprint would theoretically lose out on square footage, but the beam posts in the steel building take up a nonzero amount of floorspace.
Doing some maths based on what I paid for materials for my house, and estimating the current outrageous lumber prices, I think the materials to stick frame would be nearly the same as the material cost of the red iron building. But, this excludes siding and roofing, which would have to be done separately. In the end I think the only way this method would beat the price of the steel building is if I took on a lot of framing and siding labor.
Stick framing does still appeal to me for a couple reasons - the interior will be easier to insulate and panel the walls/ceiling when I get to that stage. Also, the costs can be spread out over a bigger timeframe, and if something disastrous happens I can pause for an indefinite period. If I get the excavation and foundation down and spend more than I intended, I can pause and order the trusses and framing materials at a later date.
The costs for the steel building are basically backwards and all up front; you have to commit to the building before you can get the loads/reactions from the supplier to get the foundation engineered, and get real foundation quotes. So basically by the time you've chosen the steel building and put in a deposit, you're locked in and have 90 days to submit the order to fabrication, and 6-12 weeks to wait for fabrication; and all of the excavation and foundation work then has to be complete and paid for in that timeframe. It feels like little room for error and that makes me nervous to commit.
Apologies for the wall of text, just trying to organize my mess of thoughts and see if anyone has any insight.
*I will add that VersaTube or other square tube carport-like structures are right out. I intend to occupy this space for 50+ years, and the wind gusts we get would send a tube shed tumbling down into the creek on the first weekend.