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How to Build a Buttress Addition On Your Barn
Author: Village Farm Alpacas Terence Callery
When my wife Bonnie and I purchased "Village Farm" in historic
Waldoboro, Maine (home of the famous five-masted schooners), we did so
because of the classic 1840 red three-story barn sitting on the hilltop
pasture. The farmhouse built next to the large 30 x 40 post and beam
barn was a secondary consideration in our decision to purchase the
property. Prospective alpaca owners should not be surprised when life
long priorities begin to get shuffled like a deck of playing cards. In
order to get ready for our first four alpacas, I initially installed
several plexiglas windows along the east side of the barn, as well as a
six-foot opening with a sliding door and entry ramp. Our thought was to
keep the alpacas on one side of the barn with a tack room to the center
back, leaving space for a work shop on the west side and storage for
our tractor, rototiller and other wheeled farm equipment in the front
center. However, this meant that our animals would require thick rubber
mats to cover the old wooden floor of the 30 x 12-foot east side.
Rubber mats can be expensive, and if the animals start pooping in the
barn with the first big rain or snowstorm, cleaning up would be
difficult. It was at this point, while speaking with Rob our carpenter, that we decided to build an addition to the barn. He
suggested a "buttress style" addition to the east side with a
corrugated metal roof that would stand 10 feet tall at its highest next
to the outside wall of the barn. The maintenance free red metal roof,
which comes in 14-foot long sections, would slope away from the barn to
a height of 7 feet along the outside wall. This would give us a 30-foot
enclosure that was 12 feet wide. Since we knew that we would eventually
have to separate males and females, we decided to continue the
enclosure around the back side of the barn as well, giving us an "L"
shaped buttress wrapped around the south-east corner of the barn. This
gave us two 30 x 12 foot legs with a 12x12 corner section adjoining
them, which we use as a catch pen/birthing area, totaling 864 sq. ft.
We used the remaining 10x12 feet of space on the southwest corner to
add a 120 sq. ft. storage shed for farm/landscaping equipment. Once
we had decided on the basic design, we began to prepare the site first
by laying crushed stone (same texture as sand) on the ground. The stone
dust, as it is also called, is easy on the alpacas legs, makes for
easy clean up, and has the side benefit of retarding slugs and
parasites. We dug 4-foot holes below the frost line for the 8-inch
diameter sauna tubes that held the concrete footings. We used 6"x 6"
posts and wall frames of standard 2"x4"s. We designed the walls in
sections that were bolted into the side posts so that they could be
removed at a later date if we decided on modifications. The walls were
made of pine shiplap with large 32-inch square unbreakable Plexiglas
windows framed in which allowed for a lot of light. The windows were
made so they could be popped out in the summer. Two x six-inch
stringers were used spaced 16" apart to support the metal roof. Hex
screws with rubber gaskets are used to screw down the metal roof making
it leak proof. I installed a shiplap barn door slider on a pair of
trolleys on the south side so that a wide opening would allow the sun
in. Two double-dutch doors were installed on the east side. Eventually,
our herd outgrew the main barn, and we built a second barn for our
males. However, the two-legged design of the buttress addition allows
us two spaces for our girls, perfect for separating crias that need to
be weaned. During most of the year, we keep the space inside the barn
on the east side open for feeding our animals. They don't not spend
much time in there, except to get away from the black flies in the
summer, so we never needed to put down the rubber mats on the wooden
floor. We use this space inside for daily feedings, as a catch area for
giving shots and trimming nails, and for shearing in the spring. For
fall and holiday open house events, when we sometimes have 200-300
visitors, we close off this section to the animals, and it becomes "the
alpaca shop" as we set up tables and display racks for fiber, yarn and
alpaca apparel. During these events, we set up the central area of the
barn to greet visitors, provide refreshments, and lay out tables
displaying farm photos and promotional materials. The idea of
creating an additional structure off of an existing barn has provided
the benefit of using the building to stage all the activities that go
along with owning alpacas. The horseshoe shaped loft in our barn is
used for general storage as well as for storing a year's worth of
square hay bales. We have room for a work shop, a firewood storage
area, fiber processing equipment, as well as a tack room--where we keep
grain in plastic barrels, a vet supply closet, and halters and leads
hung on wall pegs. Along the back wall, we have proudly hung show
ribbons (which a visitor can't miss before being led out to see the
animals). The best thing is that our alpacas really like the set up.
They like the openness that the wide doorways and large windows afford,
and they are more comfortable going into a structure with high
clearance above. They like the shade and the coolness of the crushed
stone floor in the summer. They are protected from the cold north winds
in the winter bedding down on lots of straw. We really like being able
to walk only 15 feet from our farmhouse back door into the side door of
the barn, especially during birthing season. I estimate that building a structure off of the existing barn reduced our building costs by a third--and I like that! Terence Callery Village Farm Alpacas
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