Pretty straight forward although I see I made a mistake (before coffee and without a fugue by Bach).
So ~9" deeper than I originally said for the grain house, width can be what you want.
PS As long as you keep the heights of back and center as Woods specifies the low back wall is manageable. You will store things at the back and possibly under a shelf, the upward slope of the ceiling give ample headroom after you bump your head once or twice (ask me how I know).
PPS The 4.9' depth of the grain house is the OUTER DIMENSION, actual inside depth would be ~4'
PPPS The more I think about an attached storage area the more I think it is a very good idea!
- I started with the depth of the back section of a 10' by 16' Woods which is 10' and multiplied that by 12/16 (ie scale down to a 12' overall side length):
- (10 * 12)* (12/16) = 90 inches or 7.5 feet
- I subtracted the width of the door which is 2' 7" in Woods diagrams/text to get the available depth of the back section of an 8' by 12':
- 90 - 31 = 69 inches or 4.91feet
- It is possible to make the door more narrow (24"?) but one is always carrying things in and out and high on the priority list is convenience.
- I subtracted the width of the drop boards along the back (36" using two roost bars; ie 12" from the wall, 12" between the roost bars and 12" beyond the 2nd roost to catch the poop):
- 69 - 36 = 23 inches or 1.92 feet
So ~9" deeper than I originally said for the grain house, width can be what you want.
PS As long as you keep the heights of back and center as Woods specifies the low back wall is manageable. You will store things at the back and possibly under a shelf, the upward slope of the ceiling give ample headroom after you bump your head once or twice (ask me how I know).
PPS The 4.9' depth of the grain house is the OUTER DIMENSION, actual inside depth would be ~4'
PPPS The more I think about an attached storage area the more I think it is a very good idea!
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