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how would you design a 30x30' barn

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  • how would you design a 30x30' barn

    Here's the deal. the house i am buying has a 30x30' barn with NOTHING on the inside. no stalls, no internal beams, nada. so i basically get to design the interior of the barn. I wont ever want more than 2 horses (I currently have 1, planning on free leasing something beginner OH worthy til my guy is semi retired at which point i'll purchase a yearling to start)
    I plan on keeping my tack in my house for mold control. I want something easy that i can leave open for the horses to roam in and out of and use as shelter. I want to still be able to put a round bale in the barn for them to munch on out of the elements... but i want to be able to separate them for feeding time. Feed and hay will be stored in this same building. I dont keep my horses stalled for more than feeding unless it's raining cats and dogs or is incredibly cold.
    What's getting me are the two entrances. they are on opposite ends of the barn 10ft wide. one side closes, the other doesnt...
    i would love to hear suggestions on how to design the interior to make this functional.
    www.destinationconsensusequus.com
    chaque pas est fait ensemble

  • #2
    I would build two stalls in the barn as they come in handy for injured horses.

    Do you need a feed room, wash stall, or a place for hay or blankets?

    You could use the wash stall for tacking up too...

    Comment


    • #3
      Edited: OK, the typing inthe reply box does not translate well to this space!!

      How about building two 10x12 spaces along one side, on either side of a door, (they could be stalls) and a 10X maybe 8 adjacent to one of them for feed/etc. Kinda like this:
      _____________________
      l 12 l 8 l 10 l
      l
      10
      l_______l______l

      10' door 10' door
      ________
      l l
      10 l l
      l__12___l______________l

      It leaves a large area open for the horses, yet has two stalls and a feed room....

      Loretta

      Comment


      • #4
        We used to have a somewhat similiar sized barn. Let's see if I can remember this. It was 24x30. The South end had a 10'X24' area for hay/feed/storage with one door open to the outside, and one door open to the "run-in" area. The two stalls were up against the west wall, 10x12, with the doors facing east, into the run-in area. And that left a 12x20 space in front of the stalls, which had a door to the storage, doors to the stalls, and the large door to the outside. The door to the outside did not close.

        It worked great for two horses. We could store enough hay for the whole winter, with enough room left over for a couple small grain bins, a wheelbarrow and manure forks. The stalls were there if we needed them, easy to get the horses into, but the run in was sufficiently large for two horses to share.

        Hope that made sense.
        "In order to really enjoy a dog, one doesn’t merely train him to be semi-human. The point of it is to open oneself to the possibility of becoming part dog."
        -Edward Hoagland

        Comment


        • #5
          I would get my self some grid paper and make a list of priorities that I really want in my barn, size of stalls, feed room vs feed bins, where the open door leads, if it's fenced in that's your run in build stalls on that end maybe consider the stalls as a partial divider, wash stall is great, where's the water and the drain, how about hot water? Even if you store leather goods in the house you still need space for some supplies in the barn. How's your lighting, isles, saddle stands, cross ties.

          Again, make you list of what's important to you, how big you want your stalls, to me it's nothing less than 12 x 12 and try different configurations on your grid. You might consider buying a storage shed outside of the building if you need more room.

          Comment


          • #6
            We have a very simple 36 x24 galvanized steel hoop barn--sort of a Quonset like thing. The ends are completely open. We put corral panels across the corral/pasture end, about 10 or 12 feet in. That's the horses' run-in shed. Their winter hay rations and daily feed is given to each (I have two) in opposite corners. We dont need to have any more separation than that but it would be simple enough to divide the run-in in half with more panels/gates for temporary "stalls." The corral is roughly 25x 80 feet or so, with several gates opening into various paddocks. If I were feeding round bales I'd stick a round bale feeder under the roof in the run-in. The panels we use include a short gate and a long gate--so people and horses can walk thru the one, and a truck can drive thru the other if we ever need to get into the corral with one. We have yet to need to open the big gate and the barn has been in use for two years now. The rest of the barn is used for the tractor, our utility trailer, hay, and my plastic garden shed
            (3x5) that houses a four saddle rack, hooks for halters and such, and a garbage can for feed storage. (It never gets too hot in the shed, since it's shaded, and no mold because I use synthetic tack.)I am in the Deep South so horses need only shade in the summer and a bit of a windbreak in the winter.

            If I ever had to confine a horse more closely than the area of the corral I'd borrow a couple more stock panels from the neighbors and reconfigure the water trough so both horses could get access to shade and water. Even in an emergency it wouldnt take more than about a half hour to haul panels and set it up. I had stalls before when I horsekept in OH and the only thing they were ever used for was at feeding time and the horses had the option of going in and pissing and crapping them up at night. Doors were left open. They preferred to be out even in the nastiest winter weather.

            Nowadays, with a run-in, no stalls, ten acres of grass in 6 paddocks, and two very tidy horses, I only pick and haul manure if I want some for compost. My two have not pooped ONCE in the run-in in two years. They do all their business in the field, thank you very much, and the dung beetles and weather take care of it.

            Comment

            • Original Poster

              #7
              you all have given me some really fantastic ideas. Lorilu i have no clue if what i've come up with is what you were talking about but it's brilliant!
              Okay walk in the door and on the left wall put 2 10x15ft stalls next to each other; jutting out from the west wall 10ft. The'd take up that whole left side. Have the 2 doors to the stalls next to eachother, swing outs.
              From where you enter you are then in a 8x20' space for feed and supply storage with a gate that enters the area where the stall doors are located. This "common area" would be 20x22' Thus giving me round bale space with enough room for 2 horses to negotiate, 2 stalls of ample size, and a large feed and supply area. My only concern is with dimensions on the stalls being 10x15' am i going to encounter issues if i get some big honkin WB or draftie some day? I was thinking i could make the stall walls only 5ft tall and solve that issue. i would just need to keep their feed buckets far apart so there was no food territorialness... sound good?

              There is an overhang area that looks like it's for trailer parking that is where I was planning on having the cross ties, and bathing area. i'd put folding saddle racks and hooks there. Its currently not cemented, so i was thinking of putting pea gravel there for decent drainage and mud control.
              www.destinationconsensusequus.com
              chaque pas est fait ensemble

              Comment


              • #8
                Comments on your previous post.:
                1. Don't put your stall doors next to each other unless you have bars the whole way up. I put my stall doors next to each other - they are 4' high with no bars above and one of my geldings nips the other damn horse every time she goes out, so it's a nightmare.

                2. 10x15 stalls would be great. Most barns only have 12x12 as a good stall, so 10x15 should be good.

                3. My stall walls are only 4' tall. 5' seems really tall. Mine are 4' and have no railings above them although if I were going to have any horses other than the ones that are really used to each other, I would definitely have the railings above them so they can't bother each other

                4. put your feeders at opposite sides of the stalls so you don't have someone lunging or kicking at your wall while the other one eats.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Pea gravel sounds wonderful, but isn't it very expensive? I talked to someone who said they had someone come and prepare their barn area to prevent mud and finished it off with pea gravel. Now for everything, excavating and all they spent $10,000 but they said it was worth it. But they own the property. I'm sure the pea gravel was the cheap part of the project, lol. I'm sure it looks beautiful.

                  Comment

                  • Original Poster

                    #10
                    Pea gravel is alot more expensive than regular crush and run granite. But because it has many benefits (like maintaining fantastic hooves) it seems well worth it in the long run. it's property i'm purchasing so for me its an investment worth making. I have not decided yet if i want to put pea gravel in the common area of the barn too or not. that would make cleaning really easy and give the horses more time on it
                    www.destinationconsensusequus.com
                    chaque pas est fait ensemble

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      The easiest setup I ever saw was in a barn used as stabling for a B&B. The barn was square, empty, with a large door in the front. They hung two 12' gates at each corner in such a way that they could lie flat when not used, or you swung them out to join together as two stall walls (and entrance) So two barn walls were the two back walls, two gates swung out to complete the 12'x12' square. On a 30' x30' barn, that would give you 3' between your stalls. And you can utilize the same system in the other corners to help contain haybales, etc. It's got to be one of the least expensive, fastest ways to set up a stall.

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