Bruce, this is fabulous. What a gift to have.![]()
Well, sort of.
The repairs to the barn cost ~$12K and that was just to fix the most obvious (and easiest) part that I mentioned. The "keep it from falling down too soon" bit. There is no sill under most of the east side of the barn, the post bottoms are rotted and without the sill, there is nothing to keep them in line (kind of) but the weight of the building. The top plate on the east side is also rotted, don't know whether it is a full replace or "splice in a new piece of timber in the center" type of fix. The rubble stone foundation on the south side isn't so much a foundation but a bunch of rocks that had been carefully placed in the 1800's but are now just shoved in. I also noticed that the sill is cracked there as well but not catastrophically like the one on the west side, no vertical drop ... yet. I plan to keep it supported so it doesn't drop. There isn't really a foundation under the east side but I found plenty of rocks, some too big to move by hand, where it used to be when I fixed the front of the drive bay. It needs a new roof, and probably roof boards under that. Probably well over $100K to restore it properly. That was in the plan (with the hope of some paid by a state barn restoration grant) until we had to gut half the house (which was actually an entire building) and spent way WAY WAY too much on that.
The barn guy said the little barn could be restored but it is not really historically significant enough to justify the cost. Cheaper to rip it down and build new. I've not come to grips with that yet, nor found out how much it might cost to do that or to repair, but not restore - meaning replaced wood wouldn't necessarily be timber framed. Its foundation isn't in any better shape than the one "under" the big barn. I might be able to use some of the timbers saved from the house gutting to fix some of it. If not, I can build a super strong chicken coop. Anyone else have a coop made with 8"x10" posts and beams? I didn't think so.

So for now I'm doing what those before did. Use it and hope it doesn't fall down too soon. At least we did do SOMETHING to help in that regard, unlike the prior owners.
Bruce