Any ideas/advice on moving a LARGE shed?

georgialee

Songster
10 Years
Apr 9, 2009
2,399
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Knoxville, TN
My parents have a shed at their house (the rent-to-own kind) that they no longer want. It's about 8 feet wide and easily 10 or 12 feet long. Do you think it's best if I just call the people that delivered it and see if they will move it for us for a fee? I really really want to use it 1. b/c it's big and hold LOTS of chickens! and 2. b/c it's free. If we were to build something the same size it would easily be over $1000. Plus, I already paid for half of that shed when my parents first bought it (we were living with them for a while) so just letting it sit there and rot is throwing a lot of $$ away. Does anyone have any ideas or advice on the best way to move it? It will only be about 5 miles down the road. Thanks!
 
We bought a shed that is 10X16 a few month back and this is how we moved it. We got a car trailer from a friend jacked the shed up and put it on blocks so the trailer could be back under it. put some blocks on the trailer for added support under the 4 corners. after the trailer was under the shed we jacked each corner up just enough to get the blocks out the slowly lowered each corner onto the trailer. after all 4 sides were done we strapped the shed to the trailer and drove slowly here, where we did the same thing in reverse. It only took about a hour.
 
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You may contact a wrecker/towing service that has a roll back type body on their truck. They can adjust the level of the truck bed to the level of the shed and winch it directly onto the bed. If you work around their schedule, you can probably get it done very inexpensively.
 
Thanks for the ideas! We don't have a car trailer so that won't work, unfortunately. I hadn't even thought about a wrecker service - that's a great idea!
 
I think Uhaul still rents car trailers.

I was going to get a used shed 10x12. I called a local shed builder. They would have moved it for me, but the price of the shed plus moving fees got too much for my budget.
 
I'd suggest nailing in as many 2x6s as you can fit as diagonal bracing, on all the walls and across the ceiling and floor. Ideally you do one diagonal inside and the other diagonal outside, on each wall, if you can manage without schmucking up the siding too much.

The reason is that moving a shed makes it want to 'flex' in ways that sitting there in one place never does, and you don't want things loosening or wood splitting or the structure weakening.

Good luck, "have fun"
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,

Pat
 
Thanks for all the replies!

I'll have my DH check and see if it was put together with screws ... that would make everything MUCH easier!

If it's nailed together I'll see if my mom or grandma know someone with a truck that would maybe give us a deal.
 

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