DIY Builds
Photo: Kampus Production
Concrete is one of the most common flooring bases in new horse-barn construction. It's solid and won't settle, so you won't have to pull up mats and re-level the floors every once in a while, as you do with porous flooring, like clay.
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While gravel makes for a cheaper driveway surface, tar-and-chip creates a harder, more durable surface, though it is considerably less durable than...
Read More »Barn flooring is the foundation of a clean and safe barn. Flooring needs to have good traction, so that horses and their handlers don’t slip and fall. Since barns are constantly exposed to the mess that goes along with horses, including manure, dirt, and hair, the floors need to be easy to keep clean. And because horses are so tough on their surroundings, between their weight and how they paw everything, floors need to be sturdy. We know that stall mats are important, since they combine with bedding to protect horses’ legs from concussion. And the bedding you choose will have a large impact on drainage and odor. What we’re talking about here is what goes under those mats — the floor in your barn.
Gravel is the best shed foundation, especially for portable buildings that come with a wood floor. Concrete is the ideal foundation for a garage or...
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If the annexe is deemed to be 'incidental' – namely, it is simply another room of the house – it may be built under permitted development rights....
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These are! They guide you every step of the way to complete your dream shed.
Learn More »Most other barn-flooring options are porous. Popcorn asphalt is a popular choice, and we think it’s one of the best ways to keep your barn draining, and it’s not overly expensive. Popcorn asphalt — proper name open-graded asphalt friction courses or OGFCs — is simply porous asphalt, meaning that if you put gravel under it, water (and horse urine) can go through. New advances, like polymer modifiers, make this stuff more durable. We like that because it doesn’t require quite as much bedding as concrete does, so you save money as you use it, not just at installation. A more traditional choice is stonedust, which also drains easily. Stonedust can also be called road base, washed sand, or quarry sand, depending upon where you live. It drains well but needs to be used over a base layer of sand or small gravel to promote even better draining. Properly packed, we like it under rubber mats, which give you the mats for leg health and the stonedust for drainage. As with any loose flooring material, however, stonedust can produce dusty air (and if it’s too dusty, that dust can hold odors after use), and as horses move around, the flooring will shift. Eventually, after a year or two of mucking and stamping, it will need to be re-leveled. A dirt floor is probably the cheapest option. But it also can produce messy mud in cases of a stall-bound horse or a spilled water bucket. Dirt floors often trap urine, which leads to an unpleasant ammonia smell. Dirt also needs to be laid over gravel, for drainage. Even so, it will need to be dug out every couple of years, because so much urine will get trapped. Dirt gets holes and other topography as horses paw at them, especially under a feed bucket, since many horses get excited and paw when they hear the feed cart coming with dinner. This can be addressed with a concrete pad near the door, where the most pawing happens. Also, if there is sand in the topsoil, stall mats will shift around a lot, which can be dangerous for the horse as well as frustrating for his caretakers. Some barns even have pure sand as the base. But since it doesn’t compact well, its constant shifting and motion make it difficult to maintain. Also, then you have to worry about sand colic in the stall. We think it’s more trouble than it’s worth, even if you have a natural or cheap sand source. Pure clay may be the widest available flooring. It’s also a traditional choice and will be found in many older barns. It needs to be mixed with some stonedust, though, because straight clay will compact to a hard mass with no drainage and can become slippery.
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Horse urine softens clay and allows depressions to occur, and then probing hooves make the problem worse. Packed clay with no rocks on a gravel base makes an economical floor. Like dirt, clay is difficult to keep clean, and more flooring has to be added from time to time, but it’s cleaner and more appealing than plain dirt.
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Wall insulation provides your shed with better thermal performance and improved acoustics, making your structure both a warm and a quiet place....
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This depends on the type of tarmac you use. Most tarmac is permeable or semi-permeable so check which type you will be using. If it is permeable...
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These are! They guide you every step of the way to complete your dream shed.
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While there's a good chance housing inventory will increase in 2023, borrowing rates might follow suit, or otherwise hold steady at today's higher...
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