Solve Your Storage Problems With a Prefabricated Metal Building
You should give prefabricated metal buildings a look if you are considering an expansion of your workshop or storage space. Prefabricated metal buildings are versatile, easily assembled, affordable and constructed from materials strong enough to withstand the harshest weather conditions.
S series prefabricated metal buildings work wonderfully as large workshops or garages. With its high sidewalls, rounded roof and beamless support as its major selling points, you can understand how popular this design is for garages, workshops and storage buildings. S series prefabricated metal building kits come large enough to house an RV or boat or an 18 wheeler, if you drive truck for a living. Fire departments even use them for their fire stations. Commercial and industrial shop owners like the design for its capacity to house small industrial and manufacturing operations.
The P series prefabricated metal building may be more to your liking if you want a smaller, more personal space. The P series design offers high sidewalls and arched roof ideal for housing your car or backyard workshop and can be customized to match your homes exterior. Some people even use them as guest cottages, believe it or not. Similar to the P series, the A series of prefabricated metal buildings sports a roof having a 4 to 12 pitch that resists heavy snow buildup.
Last, but certainly not least, we have the Q series prefabricated metal building, which is modeled after the iconic Quonset huts of the World War II era. Quonset huts were originally developed to house troops and equipment in the field and proved so popular that returning servicemen purchased the surplus huts for their post war housing. Universities also purchased some of the surplus for overflow student housing.
Prefabricated metal buildings are surprisingly easy to put together. Kits come with an easy to follow manual of instructions for completion of your prefabricated metal building in less than a week. Laying the foundation is the longest piece of the puzzle. Once you have laid either concrete beam supports or a full concrete floor, the rest is a matter of assembling the beams, rafters and metal sides and roof and customizing with doors and windows, wiring and insulation.