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Post Frame Buildings South Carolina

Monday, April 21, 2014

By Essie Osborn


Since the 1930s in the United States, a construction style known as "post frame" has been utilized, especially on rural or agricultural settings. The popularity of the post frame buildings South Carolina residents erect is due to many factors. These can include lower costs, ease of construction, the open design and access ease. The posts are made of natural or manufactured materials usually set directly into the ground.

Because the buildings were often constructed using the readily available materials on a farm or ranch, they tended to be low cost. The posts could be from standing timber from the tree lot on the property. These posts range in size from four-inch to as much as 12-inches. The larger they are, the more effort must be expended to put them in place. The posts are set in holes which are filled with gravel and the roof is often corrugated metal.

This type of structure is easy to erect. With pre-planning and preparation, a fairly sizable structure can be erected relatively quickly, especially if the materials are collected and prepared in the location where the building is to be erected. It helps if the site of the building is fairly level, so that the finished construction will be square.

The design may incorporate central poles to help with supporting the roof structure. Typically, this is only when the width of a building is larger than normal. The roofs are seldom steeply pitched. A typical roof surface is metal, but it could also be wood. The floor can be asphalt or concrete slabs. In other instances, the floor is made of wood. Sometimes, the ground is the floor of a structure.

The walls are often constructed of a single layer of metal or wood. The siding is usually affixed to the outside of the poles, which are evenly spaced so that doors or other openings can be left in the walls. These buildings were often erected to protect farm machinery or equipment from the weather, but are now recognized as suitable for other purposes.

When the building consists of a roof and the posts holding it up, it has a number of helpful purposes. Farm animals can wander into the space for shade or protection from bad weather. The open style may be used as a storage space for hay or other livestock feed. Open design shelters are perfect for picnic pavilions in parks or recreational facilities.

In addition to being a common building style for agricultural purposes, pole style structures are popular in other venues. Some simple cabins and even more spacious residences are constructed with the same design features. In these examples, the walls are often insulated. The poles may also become decorative features which show on the outside.

Modern buildings in the style are found as commercial buildings, churches, indoor arenas and other structures. In today's versions, the posts may be square rather than round. Simplicity and economy for storage purposes of all types are the distinguishing features. Putting garden equipment, automobiles and recreational vehicles under cover extends the life of the items.




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