We built a barn a several years ago. Here is what we did and also learned for future. More than what you asked for but thought I'd share a few extra ideas. :) I'd look into having 10 foot lean-to's on both the long (length) sides. This helps shade the stalls in summer and keeps rain and snow from blowing in to the paddock doors which in turn keeps your stalls dry - provided you are going to add paddock doors. Also have one foot overhang on the short walls (width). A one foot dirt pad was built up for the entire size of the barn and then 3 inches of one inch gravel added on top. This was for the concrete aisle and also served as a good base for the stalls. Raising above grade is extremely necessary for rain water to drain away from the barn. No back to the stall, we then added about two inches of "screenings" on top of the gravel. Used a 4 foot section of 2x4 board to level and a tamper to pack down, then 4x6 rubber stall mats were added. Only have had one mat curl in 7 stalls. No urine odor or drainage issues as shavings capture the moisture. And ground water cannot get under the mats due to the built up grade and protection from the lean-to. Even the stalls that are next to the short wall do not get wet. Insulation under the metal roof is also important. Otherwise it will drip like rain inside when the temp is warmer inside than outside. I would add a window in your tack room. I did not and I fight mold in the summer. I have a screen door that I am going to hang up to get better ventalation. I used those de-humidifier thingy's for closets and they do work! I would also go ahead and add gutters even with the lean-tos. During heavy down pours my paddock runs get a niagra falls effect and really washes my screening for the paddock runs... just means more maintenance to keep the paddocks properly filled with screenings. I use the screenings so the horses do not create a mud pit. Barn building design is fun, but be ready for sticker shock on materials. I have a friend looking into building a barn and materials have almost tripled from 2006 when we built our barn. I was shocked. 57 Here is the barn we built. Barn roof is red buried under the icky white stuff. 

Edited by ponytammy 2012-01-13 12:56 PM
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