Have you looked into prefabricated metal buildings for your storage needs. Designed for multiple uses and made from tough, maintenance free materials, these structures offer optimal protection from the elements. A prefabricated metal building will suit you just fine, regardless of your needs. Lets take a look at the different designs.
Do you need a facility for your commercial or industrial business. Without the need for either pole or beam support, the S series employs high sidewalls and a rounded roof that offer maximum floor and vertical space large enough to store recreational vehicles and boats and to house small manufacturing, distribution and maintenance operations, commercial and industrial shops and airport fueling stations. They also work well as horse barns.
Straight side walls and arched roof characterize the P series of prefabricated metal buildings, giving you a strength and durability that is perfect for a backyard garage or workshop, as well as retain and storage space. The P series is so adapatable that you can even construct and customize one for use as a guest cottage that matches the exterior of your home. The A series of prefabricated metal buildings are similar to the P series in design, with one exception. The A series roof is built to a 4 to 12 pitch that effortlessly resists heavy rain or snow buildup in extreme weather areas.
Last, but certainly not least, we have the Q series of prefabricated metal buildings. These structures are based on the classic Quonset huts developed to house troops and equipment during World War II. Their arched roof design is unbelievably strong and effortlessly withstands intense weather and such natural disasters as tornadoes and earthquakes. These prefabricated metal buildings employ no poles or beams, giving you maximum usable space for your hay, grain and crops, farm machinery, horses, livestock and even a small cropduster. They are also quite suitable as housing. Returning World War II servicemen and universities purchased the surplus huts for personal and alternative campus housing after the war ended. If you already have a home, why not consider a Q series prefabricated metal building for a mountain lodge or a cottage.
January 28th, 2010 at 7:01 pm
The first Quonset hut was first produced in a small village in the Rhode Island called Davisville at specific location called Quonset Point. This is the reason why Quonset huts are called so.
The first customers of this structure were interestingly the US Navy which was looking for a supple and adaptable building structure to cater their immediate needs to harbor safely their arms, soldiers and other supplies during the Second World War. The apparent utility of Quonset huts lied in the ability of easy transport from the place of manufacture to the place of erection and assembly at the preferred location, besides being light weight and versatile in use. To add on to the quality of hassle free assembly of a Quonset Hut it could be put to any use since it absolutely resisted any austerity of weather including rains, hail, snowfall etc.