Boy, what a difference a week can make! It was less than a
week ago we were in Texas walking the trails of Palo Duro Canyon. Two days and
700 miles later we found ourselves in the frigid snow country of South Dakota.
I thought this blog post was aptly named since our last one
was titled
Jim and Barb Go on a Hike. But
before I get into the house building I
want to take you back a couple years, 5+ years actually when Barb and I were
both working and living in western Wisconsin. We long had a dream of moving
out to the Black Hills of South Dakota. We also have a good friend Kevin who had
the same dream so two years ago we both started looking for property out here.
The Black Hills area, containing Mt. Rushmore, Crazy Horse
Monument, Wind Cave National Park, Jewel Cave, Custer State Park and Devils Tower, is actually a lot bigger than most people think. Stretching over 100
miles north to south from Spearfish to Hot Springs and east to west almost 80
miles from Rapid City to near Sundance Wyoming.
So what were the odds that we would find property near each other? Pretty
good actually since being within ½ hour of Kevin was part of our search criteria. In
the end we ended up within 15 minutes of each other when Kevin found 22 acres
just east of Pringle and we found 45 acres just south of Pringle.
We both decided to build what some call a Shouse
(Shed/House) and others call a Barndominium defined as
a type of house that includes living space attached to
either a workshop or a large garage. Some are constructed with large poles like
pole buildings and others are stick-built like conventional houses. We both
decided on the stick-built option.
So
maybe I should have titled this post
Jim
and Barb Build a Barndominium.
But since Kevin builds houses for a living perhaps it should
be titled
Kevin Builds another House.
But I think a more appropriate title is
Kevin
Builds a House while Jim and Barb do What Kevin Tells Them to do. Kevin’s
wife, Cheryl will of course be part of the crew as well but could not make it
out this trip. Whatever you call it, the four of us (and anyone who makes the mistake
of stopping by) will be building two houses this spring and summer.
Day one included clearing the snow off the
concrete foundation we poured last fall. Then it was on to snapping lines to square and
layout the building.
After two days several of the outside walls were up. Progress appears to
go fast when constructing walls as it goes from nothing to a partial building.
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A good start but a long way to go!
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View out the kitchen window |
There are challenges to building in the winter that one does not really think about. A lot of the boards have ice or snow on them and need to be dried off before adhering them to the concrete.
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We used a propane torch to dry off the boards |
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Barb attaching sill seal to the bottom plate |
Then there is the snow, when we pulled in thanks to our neighbor, our place looked like this....
Two days later after getting 5 "s of snow it looked like this.....
But the work must continue. The three of us spend 2 hours shoveling his foundation after this storm so we could continue. Kevin is here for 3 weeks so we need to get as much done as possible. We are working from about 10am to 6pm each day. Most of the days the temps have been in the 20's, one day it only it 17 and one day it actually hit the mid 30's!
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Bathroom wall going up |
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Bathroom all done! |
The building itself has an 18' center living area with outside sidewalls at 9'. The "shed" part of the building is actually 1/2 horse stalls and 1/2 garage with the same heights as the house.
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18' gable end going up |
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Standing up in place |
Then it was onto the mudroom and kitchen walls....
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Mudroom closet |
We cannot complete all the outside walls yet as we need the skid loader to lift the upstairs walls and a few beams in place. For the smaller posts and beams we are hand carrying these 200# beasts up scaffolding and ladders.
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Setting the first post in place |
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The first 8x8 beam |
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The 2nd 8x8 beam |
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First set of beams in place! |
Barb and I are learning a lot. Kevin will layout a wall, I will build it, he will inspect it and we put it up. I am learning a lot about building headers, wall partitions and corners. All of this will definitely come in handy in a few weeks when we start our place!
It is hard to visualize from these pictures but in the coming weeks I will continue to post pictures of our progress and it will all make sense.
Speaking of our place, Barb picked up the building permit yesterday. A whole $350, a fraction of the price we would have paid in Wisconsin. Plus the clerk helped her fill out the paperwork and handed her the permit right over the counter. Gotta love small towns with no red tape!