I have been a foreman or superintendent in the dirt, demo, and underground industry for nearly 30 years and am very familiar with construction contracts. Each one of these points are spot on and should be followed weather you are getting a 10x10 storage shed or a 100x500 commercial facility. A couple other points, I dont care if you live on a sandy beach or a mountain top, check the contract for a rock clause. If the site prep contractor encounters a rock it could get very expensive on you. Make sure a payout schedule, or "draw" is clearly spelled out in the contract, with final payment due upon completion AND satisfaction. It's YOUR money and you should be satisfied before final payment, don't fall for the "We will fix it under warranty" claim. By the same token, don't be a nitpicking butthead about things either, you have to find a balance point, especially if you have a quality contractor. Last, if you have a question, ASK your contractor before you sign, no matter how trivial it may seem. You will be much more satisfied and your contractor will be more than happy to clarify if they are worth their salt. Follow these tips and both you and your contractor will be happy and the process will go much smoother.
Talk to an independent adjuster. Who has experience in your area for your type of project. The most common scam is water flood, hail, wind tornado. Discuss bonding cost. Had a contractor commit suicide. Bank completed project.
I wish I found this video about 5 months ago. Every single point is spot on. I missed the first piece of advice and paid dearly for it. I wasn't in a hurry. I don't know what I was thinking, but I was talked into buying before I had even considered what it was I was purchasing. I would add one piece of advice, find a builder that is in your local area. If you have trouble, and you will, then you aren't dealing with someone 5 states away who really doesn't care anymore. I learned several lessons that I didn't need to learn if I had just followed these five pieces of advice.
I purchased a building from Chet at Sentry builders about 4 years ago. They did everything from start to finish. It was one of the very few construction projects I’ve ever been involved with that went as planned and didn’t have any additional expenses. I would use them again if I ever had the need for another building. This is not a paid advertisement just a positive comment from a happy customer. Thanks Chet!
Thanks for taking the time to leave your feedback @J H, we are glad it turned out so well for you and that we were able to meet your needs and expectations. Please don't hesitate if were ever able to be of service again, otherwise continue enjoying our building.
I came to this video because I am looking into putting up a steel building on some property I may be buying in Arizona, boy am I glad I did, very wise advice given here.
Glad you found the video useful @James Battles. We hope everything works out well for you in your move and if you need any help on your project we would love the opportunity to work with you if you desire. Please see our website for contact information www.Sentry-Steel.com. If you're not already familiar with Arizona we're sure you'll love it here. Thanks for watching and commenting.
anybody who tells you this information is not looking to rip you off. only to be a happy customer and tell others or come back and buy something else, Thank You for the info I know i"ll need it.
Thanks Kevin for the affirmation. Our goal with these videos is to help inform anyone looking to purchase a steel building, whether they become our customers or not.
This is the second of your videos I've watched, and both have given me the impression that you're a very honest man who's running a very honest company. If I were still living in AZ, I'd definitely give you a call. THanks for sharing all this useful info!!
thanks for the honesty info, i worked masonry for 4 years and oil field for the past 6. i want to build a steal building shop/house. honesty is a hard commodity these days. thanks for the tips before i build. wish more builders were this honest
Good advice from a pro! Thanks. Rant Follows: Building codes were created to make construction safer (admission: I'm a licensed Professional Engineer [in TX]). Anyone on your property now or in future could be hurt or killed if construction is sloppy. Yes it's a pain. Yes it's more expensive. I hate to shell out for a 'to code'...oh...water heater instead of getting the cheapest price. Fact: Before 1940 50% of electricians died by electrocution after The Code was introduced very few accidents to workers or owners. Thanks, everybody, for putting up with the rant! Just my $0.02 ($0.01 inflation adjusted).
I agree with you. Without codes shady contractors would be cutting even more corners than they do today. Building codes and their enforcement are a good thing.
Don't try to play the safety card on me. It is my property and my risk to take not the governments. I can go to Walmart and buy enough alcohol to kill myself 5 times over for 100 bucks but I can't choose how I want to build my footers or how airtight I want my house? I would agree that a random house buyer should know how his house was constructed and know it is safe to live in, but if I am building something for my own personal use then the government should have no part in it. Just make it the law that any rouge construction must be taken down prior to selling or the buyer must be notified that it is not built to any codes. Then it becomes a deal between two consenting adults and once again the government needs to stay out. In the good old days we had revolutions for a lot less than the government is doing now... I can buy a car for the price of the inspections/permits alone on houses in some areas.
Plot layouts and drainage concerns are real problems if your 5000 square foot building with it's massive watershed floods out a couple neighbor's basements every time you get an inch of rain in an hour.
Thanks for this interesting and helpful video. As of this writing, there are 433,590 views, resulting in 1,800 likes. Also there are 102 "dislikes," most of which were likely provided by steel-building salesmen.
@@dwaynecarter9219 Well, then, You Sir, cannot read, and no amount of "Numbers" mentioned, would have helped you, because you wouldn't have understood them anyway. So, pay attention to video "Titles", and you might actually get what you were looking for. This is what we're talking about, when we say "Dumb-Shits who do not pay attention". That is YOU, Sir. Why would you have expected numbers to have been mentioned? Thank god that you took the time write down all of the reasons as to why a person should assume that you are stupid.
Thanks for the info. Great video, I wish you were in Iowa, I need to put up a building like this. Looks real solid building and quality work on your part. God bless you.
This is absolutely spot-on advice! Thanks! I didn't know any of this before I ordered my 30x66 steel building with 3 bays and a stable but luckily I have a master builder friend who coached me with these very same tips and set up the building. The building outfit wanted to sell me their doors but I went with a local overhead door company and got insulated doors with top lights, which I love. thanks again for the vid. sam
We're excited to hear that your project worked out so well for you @Sam Stroup, and good for your friend to help you along in the process. Thanks for watching and contributing.
We're glad you found it useful @BlueBar 55, we hope your move goes well. If you decide to invest in a steel building, we would love to have the opportunity to help you build it, please see our website if you'd like to contact us, www.Sentry-Steel.com
I had a steel building Installed on my residential property. I hired a contractor that took care of everything. He kept me out of trouble with the County building department - 600 sq. ft maximum on my property! The building was finished quickly and is really nice.
We're glad you found the video enjoyable and useful @MaucTopa 1337. Our videography skills leave something to be desired, but we try to provide the information people are looking for none-the-less.
In Texas we bought 5 to 10 acre tracks and built houses and put up a 30x50 all steel buildings , most looked like the one in the video. We did put chicken wire under the vinyl insulation to keep it from sagging. Red iron beams the only way to go. Oh yea and watch out for them "special" deals.
Use your common sense about specials is spot on.Its up to you to negotiate,do your do diligence,and price check before commiting.Call your building inspector first with all relevant questions,he really is the yes or no contact person.DON'T BE AFRAID TO NEGOTIATE PRICE ON THESE KITS,there trying to make a sale,your trying to get the best price,MOST companies will negotiate,OR there competition will.If your happy with the price,after doing your homework,thats all that matters,GET IT ON PAPER.Dont worry about "specials"or other crap,negotiate hard and get the best quality and price you can get.I bought the kit,and will build it myself,at my pace with my quality of build to code.
Thanks for your comments @moultonditcher, we appreciate you personal experience & feedback. Making sure you know the building code for your area is right on, do not rely on what the building company has on their spreadsheets. In almost all situations, we have to modify part of the design criteria from what the table shows, to what is true to any given area. Make a trip to your building department, if you can right now, and speak to someone face to face. Get a list of all the different criteria your potential building supplier is going to ask for prior to going, if possible.
Very helpful, thank you! I'm looking to build a smallish (18x20ish) ADU/guest cottage/workshop in my back yard here in TX, and have just started considering steel (I was planning CMU/masonry, because we want it to act as a storm shelter as well). After one day of research I've already seen a few of these tactics! This is great info to have!
@@sentrybuilders5969 Thanks! I'm very excited! I'm actually looking into Quonsets at the moment--I think the arch roof looks cool and will give me the space and the cozy interior feeling I'm after. Quonset homes/ADUs are big business, it seems. I'd be very interested in seeing a similar video from you about those (if there are different factors to be aware of, and of course if you want to do one). Sure wish you guys were in my area. Thank you again, and thanks for the reply! I've been loosely planning this project for three years now, and in that time have contacted dozens and dozens of builders, design/build firms, concrete companies, building material suppliers, lumber yards, CMU manufacturers and distributers, foundation companies, engineers. steel building companies, steel building materials companies...you name it, I've emailed at least five or six of them each. Out of those dozens of emails I got *three* replies, and every one was to tell me they don't deal with the general public (okay, one design/build firm--a fourth reply--was willing to talk to me...they needed $3k just to pick up their pencil). It's very depressing and discouraging, so even just to be acknowledged means a lot.
I really wish I would have watched this before buying my steel building this year. You are so right to be careful of what the sales people try to reel you into. Too late for me now, It's finally almost finished. Sales people lie.
i am actually talking with them on one and they had a "special deal for me" if I acted before end of July. I didnt bite but did want to give them my plans so they can give me info. lol
Good tips! Considering this video is 8 years old, some variables have changed in regard to down payments. The volatility of steel prices has a direct affect on overall pricing of structures, when steel prices went up (a lot!) this last year, some customers paid a set amount for their deposit, locked there price in, and once production began the price of their structure went up immensely causing the company to either lose money on the deal or break even. When a 50% deposit is required it is not because anyone is trying to just get a quick sale (at least the honest sales reps) but it is because we want them to get their building at todays steel pricing. If a company orders steel today and a month later steel goes up 10%, they are getting the steel that was priced accordingly. If your dealing with a decent company the sales rep will not put you on the back burner once they get your deposit, they should be working with you throughout the entire process. Again this is an informative video with great tips but the economy has certainly changed since then.
Great tips, a real builder,I also find it helpful to create maybe 10 draws on a job. And make all the draws subject to goals, you get to this point, you get a check, right down the line to finish. Am a carpenter by trade, but like the size and price of those steel buildings. Built a 30 X 60 in Brunswick Georgia.
I just bought a building today.. I've shopped for years.. You have great information, and I'm glad that I took my time.. I'm very excited to get this big project going.. I'm doing a restroom, shower and utility sink !! Thanks great video !!
@@burtburt1755 Hello, the building is custom designed with a recessed porch on one corner. It has 14 ft walls went with a 2:12 roof pitch. We are very pleased with it.
Absolutely no reason for a thumbs down on this. Thanks for taking the time to share. I am in need of a steel building. 30x36 in unincorporated Lexington township in Johnson county kansas. Needing a professional builder that understands the codes, as I want to customize it a bit and understand how high I can have the roof to see if i can have a second floor partially. The steel barn in this video is what I am after as far as materials go. Looking for suggestions on a builder in my area. Thank you
We are glad to hear the video was helpful @pttazwilliams, we're builders, not videographers, so hopefully what our videos lack in finesse is made up for by sound advice. We are not familiar with any specific builders in your area, but we can recommend some building providers that might be able to help you get the building you want and connect you with a local erector. MBCI has locations throughout the US, Rapidset Metal Buildings is located in Colorado but they ship all over, and Mueller Inc isn't too far from where you are at either. We have worked with and purchased from all of these suppliers and have had a good experience in working with them, they might be able to help you find an experienced local builder as well. In order to determine what is allowed on your property, a trip into your local county building authority is going to be your best bet. While you're there go over all the aspects of what you want to do and try and get all the details of what is allowed, height, setbacks, current adopted building code, local amendments to that building code if any, etc. Some jurisdictions are more friendly and helpful than others, so if your's happens to be a less friendly one, don't forget, or let them forget, that you, your taxes, and your permit fees pay for their job and as "public servants" they are there to help you, not patronize you. It's unfortunate but sometimes you have to be very persistent. Best of luck on your future project, thanks for watching and commenting.
Nice building. Much better than the one I bought. I was able to install a 30 x 36 ft metal building with 15-foot peak 15-foot-wide opening from a kit. The company that sold it to me is now out of business. My son, my granddaughter and I did most of the work. We had help from neighbors. Luckily for me I have a neighbor not more than 1/2 mile from my house who sold the 2 x 6 x 12 lumber that the kit called for, came down and unloaded the flatbed with his forklift when the metal was delivered and another neighbor with a boom on a truck put up the girders after they were bolted together. I was able to borrow a chop saw to cut the metal sheets to size and another friend who owned an overhead door company loaned scaffolding to us. We now have a lift installed to work on vehicles. My only screw up was not getting the concrete floor higher off the ground so the pad angled down so that rain couldn't come into the building. I had to install a sump pump to pump the water far enough away from the building so it can't come in. Forgot to add that I didn't have any problem with the planning department. We drew it up and got it approved. We are zoned agricultural so that probably helped.
Glad we could be of help Chris Goodman, thanks for watching and commenting. Good luck on your project, and if you're in the state of Arizona we'd love to earn your business.
The price of my pole building went up 20% the week I went to buy my project with no explanation; just a lot of hand wringing. Doug from Hansen's hung up on me when I mentioned this video. Thanks for the information guys.
You're very welcome @elcasiquegrande, we're glad we could be of help to you. Thanks for watching and commenting. Best of luck on any future steel building projects.
I've been building these for many years and agree with all his points! Spot on! You have to be very careful with who you buy from too! I'm doing one right now that is horribly thought out! Absolutely atrocious. Luckily for the homeowner, between the three of us builders we have nearly 70 years of experience. Or else this poor homeowner would be getting screwed even worse.
We are glad to hear you are helping your client work out the problem it sounds like they were unknowing placed in @Eyeball Engineering. We are also happy to hear we agree on what this simple video briefly covers, it sounds like your doing the right thing for your own clients and that helps all of us out in the steel industry. We wish you the best in your own endeavors.
Very useful information, Thanks for the heads up. Like anything you have to maneuver around just to get a fair respectable deal. These points you pointed out help out alot.
Not only that. My friend's friend paid at least half the cost up front for a built in pool. They never heard from the contractor again. I had a house built, but paid in installments along the way. The contractor still left the house 90 percent unfinished and claimed he was out of money despite receiving 100 percent by then. He also stole materials from me. In the end, he lost his contractor's license and his marriage because of his actions.
Thanks Chet, All good points to address before contracting for a Steal Bldg. I would say the most important is Common Sense is Number 1 and rare trait today to find. You Sir obviously don't lack that quality. Which you operated in South Central Texas. Have a Blessed Day.
I have been a foreman or superintendent in the dirt, demo, and underground industry for nearly 30 years and am very familiar with construction contracts. Each one of these points are spot on and should be followed weather you are getting a 10x10 storage shed or a 100x500 commercial facility. A couple other points, I dont care if you live on a sandy beach or a mountain top, check the contract for a rock clause. If the site prep contractor encounters a rock it could get very expensive on you. Make sure a payout schedule, or "draw" is clearly spelled out in the contract, with final payment due upon completion AND satisfaction. It's YOUR money and you should be satisfied before final payment, don't fall for the "We will fix it under warranty" claim. By the same token, don't be a nitpicking butthead about things either, you have to find a balance point, especially if you have a quality contractor. Last, if you have a question, ASK your contractor before you sign, no matter how trivial it may seem. You will be much more satisfied and your contractor will be more than happy to clarify if they are worth their salt. Follow these tips and both you and your contractor will be happy and the process will go much smoother.
Midnite Ryder
That was good advice, thanks for posting.
Talk to an independent adjuster. Who has experience in your area for your type of project. The most common scam is water flood, hail, wind tornado. Discuss bonding cost. Had a contractor commit suicide. Bank completed project.
Get all critical points in writing in the contract
Should be a " stump" clause too.
@@treeguyable What's a stump clause?
I wish I found this video about 5 months ago. Every single point is spot on. I missed the first piece of advice and paid dearly for it. I wasn't in a hurry. I don't know what I was thinking, but I was talked into buying before I had even considered what it was I was purchasing. I would add one piece of advice, find a builder that is in your local area. If you have trouble, and you will, then you aren't dealing with someone 5 states away who really doesn't care anymore. I learned several lessons that I didn't need to learn if I had just followed these five pieces of advice.
I purchased a building from Chet at Sentry builders about 4 years ago. They did everything from start to finish. It was one of the very few construction projects I’ve ever been involved with that went as planned and didn’t have any additional expenses. I would use them again if I ever had the need for another building. This is not a paid advertisement just a positive comment from a happy customer. Thanks Chet!
Thanks for taking the time to leave your feedback @J H, we are glad it turned out so well for you and that we were able to meet your needs and expectations. Please don't hesitate if were ever able to be of service again, otherwise continue enjoying our building.
Thank you for sharing
I came to this video because I am looking into putting up a steel building on some property I may be buying in Arizona, boy am I glad I did, very wise advice given here.
Glad you found the video useful @James Battles. We hope everything works out well for you in your move and if you need any help on your project we would love the opportunity to work with you if you desire. Please see our website for contact information www.Sentry-Steel.com. If you're not already familiar with Arizona we're sure you'll love it here. Thanks for watching and commenting.
anybody who tells you this information is not looking to rip you off. only to be a happy customer and tell others or come back and buy something else,
Thank You for the info I know i"ll need it.
Thanks Kevin for the affirmation. Our goal with these videos is to help inform anyone looking to purchase a steel building, whether they become our customers or not.
Sentry Builders
Sentry Builders are
Sentry Builders are
9 years later and this is still golden information! Thank you!
This is the second of your videos I've watched, and both have given me the impression that you're a very honest man who's running a very honest company. If I were still living in AZ, I'd definitely give you a call. THanks for sharing all this useful info!!
thanks for the honesty info, i worked masonry for 4 years and oil field for the past 6. i want to build a steal building shop/house. honesty is a hard commodity these days. thanks for the tips before i build. wish more builders were this honest
Great info and I wrote it down as my checklist before I spend $1.
This is 110% accurate. Good advice.
Thanks for watching @Keepit Real, we're glad to hear the feedback that is was helpful to you.
Good advice from a pro! Thanks. Rant Follows: Building codes were created to make construction safer (admission: I'm a licensed Professional Engineer [in TX]). Anyone on your property now or in future could be hurt or killed if construction is sloppy. Yes it's a pain. Yes it's more expensive. I hate to shell out for a 'to code'...oh...water heater instead of getting the cheapest price. Fact: Before 1940 50% of electricians died by electrocution after The Code was introduced very few accidents to workers or owners. Thanks, everybody, for putting up with the rant! Just my $0.02 ($0.01 inflation adjusted).
You are full of shit! 50% of electricians died prior to 1940....another shill for the industry.
I agree with you. Without codes shady contractors would be cutting even more corners than they do today. Building codes and their enforcement are a good thing.
Don't try to play the safety card on me. It is my property and my risk to take not the governments. I can go to Walmart and buy enough alcohol to kill myself 5 times over for 100 bucks but I can't choose how I want to build my footers or how airtight I want my house?
I would agree that a random house buyer should know how his house was constructed and know it is safe to live in, but if I am building something for my own personal use then the government should have no part in it. Just make it the law that any rouge construction must be taken down prior to selling or the buyer must be notified that it is not built to any codes. Then it becomes a deal between two consenting adults and once again the government needs to stay out.
In the good old days we had revolutions for a lot less than the government is doing now... I can buy a car for the price of the inspections/permits alone on houses in some areas.
Plot layouts and drainage concerns are real problems if your 5000 square foot building with it's massive watershed floods out a couple neighbor's basements every time you get an inch of rain in an hour.
Thank you for sharing some solid advice.
Thank you sir. I was gonna pay in full. Best advice ever!!!
Sounds like you found the video just in time, we hope everything works out well for you in your future purchase @Craigory Robie.
Very informative video. Thank you for taking the time to share your insights and help the rest of us.
Thank you. Very good advice Nice looking buildings.
Thanks for this interesting and helpful video. As of this writing, there are 433,590 views, resulting in 1,800 likes. Also there are 102 "dislikes," most of which were likely provided by steel-building salesmen.
He didnt give any numbers ... I got here looking to compare cost of total construction. Not really tips on talking to salesman.
@@dwaynecarter9219. The title of the video explains exactly what was talked about. The video deserves a thumbs up and you get a thumbs down
@@dwaynecarter9219 Well, then, You Sir, cannot read, and no amount of "Numbers" mentioned, would have helped you, because you wouldn't have understood them anyway. So, pay attention to video "Titles", and you might actually get what you were looking for. This is what we're talking about, when we say "Dumb-Shits who do not pay attention". That is YOU, Sir. Why would you have expected numbers to have been mentioned? Thank god that you took the time write down all of the reasons as to why a person should assume that you are stupid.
This guy is spot on with respect to deals..You call to get estimates and all the sudden they have a special deal for you..
kinda like car dealers??
lol
Thanks for the info. Great video, I wish you were in Iowa, I need to put up a building like this. Looks real solid building and quality work on your part.
God bless you.
This is absolutely spot-on advice! Thanks! I didn't know any of this before I ordered my 30x66 steel building with 3 bays and a stable but luckily I have a master builder friend who coached me with these very same tips and set up the building. The building outfit wanted to sell me their doors but I went with a local overhead door company and got insulated doors with top lights, which I love. thanks again for the vid. sam
We're excited to hear that your project worked out so well for you @Sam Stroup, and good for your friend to help you along in the process. Thanks for watching and contributing.
Great Information Thanks.... I'm moving to Arizona near the end of the year and I'm researching metal building and this video helped alot.👍
We're glad you found it useful @BlueBar 55, we hope your move goes well. If you decide to invest in a steel building, we would love to have the opportunity to help you build it, please see our website if you'd like to contact us, www.Sentry-Steel.com
I had a steel building Installed on my residential property. I hired a contractor that took care of everything. He kept me out of trouble with the County building department - 600 sq. ft maximum on my property! The building was finished quickly and is really nice.
Tag or mention the company that you used so that other viewers can find them.
Thank you for your insight with steel buildings, this is how we learn. Thank you again.
You're very welcome
Best advice that I have gotten today!
great video. He mentioned all the problems I ran into when I was doing my metal building
...........z.. X............. z.... Z.......
...........z.. X............. z.... Z.......
@Vin Commons I have no idea what you're trying to say?
Thank you for your insight. It's refreshing to see that someone is looking out for the interest of others.
We appreciate that!
Erected these building for 20 years.not this brand but same type.this gentleman is spot on 100%
We appreciate your input and confirmation @belly flop, thanks for watching.
He did a great job on presenting!
Very informative and to the point. Thanks!
Excellent video! Short, to the point, informative, no fluff!
We're glad you found the video enjoyable and useful @MaucTopa 1337. Our videography skills leave something to be desired, but we try to provide the information people are looking for none-the-less.
AWESOME !!. Information .. 👍🏻💯👍🏻 God Bless You. Jesus 🕊️ Loves you
Thank you for sharing this!! Very helpful!!
Great information, thank you for taking the time and doing this very helpful video! 👍
Best Regards,
Ray
Outstanding advice. Thank you!
You bet!
Thank you, Great advice!
In Texas we bought 5 to 10 acre tracks and built houses and put up a 30x50 all steel buildings , most looked like the one in the video. We did put chicken wire under the vinyl insulation to keep it from sagging. Red iron beams the only way to go. Oh yea and watch out for them "special" deals.
very informative thank you for looking after the customer :)
Use your common sense about specials is spot on.Its up to you to negotiate,do your do diligence,and price check before commiting.Call your building inspector first with all relevant questions,he really is the yes or no contact person.DON'T BE AFRAID TO NEGOTIATE PRICE ON THESE KITS,there trying to make a sale,your trying to get the best price,MOST companies will negotiate,OR there competition will.If your happy with the price,after doing your homework,thats all that matters,GET IT ON PAPER.Dont worry about "specials"or other crap,negotiate hard and get the best quality and price you can get.I bought the kit,and will build it myself,at my pace with my quality of build to code.
Thanks for your comments @moultonditcher, we appreciate you personal experience & feedback. Making sure you know the building code for your area is right on, do not rely on what the building company has on their spreadsheets. In almost all situations, we have to modify part of the design criteria from what the table shows, to what is true to any given area. Make a trip to your building department, if you can right now, and speak to someone face to face. Get a list of all the different criteria your potential building supplier is going to ask for prior to going, if possible.
Thanks for the good advise we almost got roped in thinking this was a one and only building that customer had already paid deposit on
Great Advice & Very Well Presented.. Thanks !
Good advice for any building project. Thanks!
Glad we could be of help @Mark Wheeler, thanks for watching and adding to the conversation.
Very helpful, thank you! I'm looking to build a smallish (18x20ish) ADU/guest cottage/workshop in my back yard here in TX, and have just started considering steel (I was planning CMU/masonry, because we want it to act as a storm shelter as well). After one day of research I've already seen a few of these tactics! This is great info to have!
Sounds great!
@@sentrybuilders5969 Thanks! I'm very excited! I'm actually looking into Quonsets at the moment--I think the arch roof looks cool and will give me the space and the cozy interior feeling I'm after.
Quonset homes/ADUs are big business, it seems. I'd be very interested in seeing a similar video from you about those (if there are different factors to be aware of, and of course if you want to do one). Sure wish you guys were in my area.
Thank you again, and thanks for the reply! I've been loosely planning this project for three years now, and in that time have contacted dozens and dozens of builders, design/build firms, concrete companies, building material suppliers, lumber yards, CMU manufacturers and distributers, foundation companies, engineers. steel building companies, steel building materials companies...you name it, I've emailed at least five or six of them each. Out of those dozens of emails I got *three* replies, and every one was to tell me they don't deal with the general public (okay, one design/build firm--a fourth reply--was willing to talk to me...they needed $3k just to pick up their pencil). It's very depressing and discouraging, so even just to be acknowledged means a lot.
This by far has been the MOST valuable video I have watched on steel buildings!! I owe you my friend
It makes us happy to hear we've been able to share some of our experinece with you @Aaron Jerome, we hope it serves you well.
Some of the points could apply to buying a home, car or choosing a spouse. Well presented.
It would appear some truths are universal, lol. Thanks for watching and commenting @TJ Squatchy.
I really wish I would have watched this before buying my steel building this year. You are so right to be careful of what the sales people try to reel you into. Too late for me now, It's finally almost finished. Sales people lie.
Where did you buy your building?
Smh me too I just bought one from Armstrong steel
thanks mud, I was about make a deal with them
Simon Kariuki if your still looking i can get you a bid an see if it works 4 you
i am actually talking with them on one and they had a "special deal for me" if I acted before end of July. I didnt bite but did want to give them my plans so they can give me info. lol
Thank you for your easy to understand, very important information.
Not a problem,yous welcome sweetie
thanks for this! I had no clue I was supposed to get permission first!
Good tips!
Considering this video is 8 years old, some variables have changed in regard to down payments. The volatility of steel prices has a direct affect on overall pricing of structures, when steel prices went up (a lot!) this last year, some customers paid a set amount for their deposit, locked there price in, and once production began the price of their structure went up immensely causing the company to either lose money on the deal or break even. When a 50% deposit is required it is not because anyone is trying to just get a quick sale (at least the honest sales reps) but it is because we want them to get their building at todays steel pricing. If a company orders steel today and a month later steel goes up 10%, they are getting the steel that was priced accordingly. If your dealing with a decent company the sales rep will not put you on the back burner once they get your deposit, they should be working with you throughout the entire process.
Again this is an informative video with great tips but the economy has certainly changed since then.
You are 100% correct! Great call out, we need more people like you commenting on these kinds of threads. I appreciate it.
Great tips, a real builder,I also find it helpful to create maybe 10 draws on a job. And make all the draws subject to goals, you get to this point, you get a check, right down the line to finish.
Am a carpenter by trade, but like the size and price of those steel buildings. Built a 30 X 60 in Brunswick Georgia.
Thank you for the information. Has helped a lot. You're my hero
I just bought a building today.. I've shopped for years.. You have great information, and I'm glad that I took my time..
I'm very excited to get this big project going.. I'm doing a restroom, shower and utility sink !! Thanks great video !!
Vdubin64 who was the vendor you bought from
Good advice for more than just steel buildings. Thank you.
Glad to help
Good video... Good ideas to help. People very honest 😁
Good advice! Thanks
You bet!
Thanks Chet. Very helpful as we begin the process.
Glad it was helpful!
Great information on buying a metal building, thanks for taking the time to make this video.
We're happy to hear it was useful to you @Wilson106 Wilson106, thanks for watching.
Watched this video when we started our metal building project. Our 40'x60' building was finished this week. Thank you.
That is awesome! Glad to hear your project went well and that we were perhaps able to help. Thanks for watching and commenting.
How high is your 40x60 and did you concrete it?
@@burtburt1755 Hello, the building is custom designed with a recessed porch on one corner. It has 14 ft walls went with a 2:12 roof pitch. We are very pleased with it.
Absolutely no reason for a thumbs down on this. Thanks for taking the time to share. I am in need of a steel building. 30x36 in unincorporated Lexington township in Johnson county kansas. Needing a professional builder that understands the codes, as I want to customize it a bit and understand how high I can have the roof to see if i can have a second floor partially. The steel barn in this video is what I am after as far as materials go. Looking for suggestions on a builder in my area. Thank you
We are glad to hear the video was helpful @pttazwilliams, we're builders, not videographers, so hopefully what our videos lack in finesse is made up for by sound advice.
We are not familiar with any specific builders in your area, but we can recommend some building providers that might be able to help you get the building you want and connect you with a local erector. MBCI has locations throughout the US, Rapidset Metal Buildings is located in Colorado but they ship all over, and Mueller Inc isn't too far from where you are at either. We have worked with and purchased from all of these suppliers and have had a good experience in working with them, they might be able to help you find an experienced local builder as well.
In order to determine what is allowed on your property, a trip into your local county building authority is going to be your best bet. While you're there go over all the aspects of what you want to do and try and get all the details of what is allowed, height, setbacks, current adopted building code, local amendments to that building code if any, etc. Some jurisdictions are more friendly and helpful than others, so if your's happens to be a less friendly one, don't forget, or let them forget, that you, your taxes, and your permit fees pay for their job and as "public servants" they are there to help you, not patronize you. It's unfortunate but sometimes you have to be very persistent.
Best of luck on your future project, thanks for watching and commenting.
Nice building. Much better than the one I bought. I was able to install a 30 x 36 ft metal building with 15-foot peak 15-foot-wide opening from a kit. The company that sold it to me is now out of business. My son, my granddaughter and I did most of the work. We had help from neighbors. Luckily for me I have a neighbor not more than 1/2 mile from my house who sold the 2 x 6 x 12 lumber that the kit called for, came down and unloaded the flatbed with his forklift when the metal was delivered and another neighbor with a boom on a truck put up the girders after they were bolted together. I was able to borrow a chop saw to cut the metal sheets to size and another friend who owned an overhead door company loaned scaffolding to us. We now have a lift installed to work on vehicles. My only screw up was not getting the concrete floor higher off the ground so the pad angled down so that rain couldn't come into the building. I had to install a sump pump to pump the water far enough away from the building so it can't come in. Forgot to add that I didn't have any problem with the planning department. We drew it up and got it approved. We are zoned agricultural so that probably helped.
Sounds like you are a living example of 'it's not what you know but who you know.' Glad to hear it all worked out, thanks for watching.
Great job Chet!!! Larry
Thanks Larry. Nice to hear from you. You're definitely one of the few who do Steel Building sales right.
Chet
nice show thanks john
Thanks for posting and sharing your wisdom .
Glad we could be of help @radioguy1620, thanks for watching and commenting.
This was a good presentation. Thanks.
Good Info , Thanks!
Thank you for all the great info. I'll be buying next year probably.
Glad we could be of help Chris Goodman, thanks for watching and commenting. Good luck on your project, and if you're in the state of Arizona we'd love to earn your business.
The price of my pole building went up 20% the week I went to buy my project with no explanation; just a lot of hand wringing. Doug from Hansen's hung up on me when I mentioned this video. Thanks for the information guys.
We're sorry to hear you were treated that way @C H, we hope it worked out well for you in the end. Thanks for watching and commenting.
Thanks so much for taking the time to make this. I appreciate the information..particularly point #5.
You're very welcome @elcasiquegrande, we're glad we could be of help to you. Thanks for watching and commenting. Best of luck on any future steel building projects.
I've been building these for many years and agree with all his points! Spot on! You have to be very careful with who you buy from too! I'm doing one right now that is horribly thought out! Absolutely atrocious. Luckily for the homeowner, between the three of us builders we have nearly 70 years of experience. Or else this poor homeowner would be getting screwed even worse.
We are glad to hear you are helping your client work out the problem it sounds like they were unknowing placed in @Eyeball Engineering. We are also happy to hear we agree on what this simple video briefly covers, it sounds like your doing the right thing for your own clients and that helps all of us out in the steel industry. We wish you the best in your own endeavors.
@@sentrybuilders5969 Agreed. Steel buildings are such a great investment if properly purchased and built.
Very useful information, Thanks for the heads up. Like anything you have to maneuver around just to get a fair respectable deal. These points you pointed out help out alot.
Thanks for watching our video @jack pegram, and we're glad we could be of some help. Best of luck on any future building project.
Thank you for the info, very informative...
Thanks for the Pre Buy Education... 👍. Great Detail.. 👍
You bet, glad it was helpful to you @Sgt.
Smart man!! Great pointers all around!! Thanks so much!
Glad we could be of some help @Fishtown BikesnBeans, thanks for watching and commenting.
Thanks for some great advice
It makes us happy to hear it was helpful to you @chicken hawk farmstead, best of luck on any future projects.
Very informative video thanks for all the wonderful advice.
Glad we could be of help @Worsham's Lawn Service, hope you have a great New Year.
@@sentrybuilders5969 you have a Happy New Years as well.
I hope we find a builder like you here in Oldham county, Kentucky! Very invaluable information, thank you.
Thank you, and we hope so too! Best of luck and thanks for watching @Tamara Stevenson.
That's really good advice, paying too much up front can make you less of a priority tomorrow.
Not only that. My friend's friend paid at least half the cost up front for a built in pool. They never heard from the contractor again.
I had a house built, but paid in installments along the way. The contractor still left the house 90 percent unfinished and claimed he was out of money despite receiving 100 percent by then. He also stole materials from me. In the end, he lost his contractor's license and his marriage because of his actions.
Thank You for Your great advise.
great advice!
Thanks for watching!
thank you for sharing your expertise.
great advice
Thx a Ton for the Post.
You're welcome
Thank you for your honesty and concerns
this was all really good info vary helpful, thanks
thanks for the video
Thanks Chet, All good points to address before contracting for a Steal Bldg. I would say the most important is Common Sense is Number 1 and rare trait today to find. You Sir obviously don't lack that quality. Which you operated in South Central Texas. Have a Blessed Day.
We greatly appreciate your compliment mcanning51, and wish you the best as you move forward.
Great info!!
AWESOME information.
Very helpful. Thanks.
Excellent points / advice.
Thanks for commenting Robert DeMilo, glad we could help.
Excellant video.You've really taught me a lot and they are all good things I can use, Thank You. Dave, Western New York.
Glad you enjoyed it b0v1k7x B, best of luck.
Awesome video! Thanks for the Info.
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching @Chip Spline.
excellent, thank you for getting to the point, no bells and whistles, please keep it that way, good luck to you
Glad it was helpful!
Great advice. And also ask about warranty on materials.
Great addition @Wildbill, thanks for adding to the conversation.
Great information! Thank you!
Glad you found it helpful @Kara Thomas, best of luck in your future projects.
thanks for heads up chet.
I respect the honesty, just beginning my search
We appreciate you're input @Sean W, hope the information serves you well and that your future project is everything you want it to be.
Thank you sir!
Great video full of useful info thanks .
Thank you for your infomation !
Definitely good tips
Glad you enjoyed the video SAM Castañeda, have a good one.
Thank you for the information.
Our pleasure!