Shop to Shell: Walk Through Building a Yankee Barn Home

Stud Precut Line and Shoe/Plate Alignment. Here all the shoes and plates are laid out along a 75' bench (against the back wall) so that we can ensure they are all the same dimension.

True Wall Plate Line. All the plates and studs are brought together and placed on the wall table machine. This verifies that each panel is absolutely square. Next the window components, insulation, and exterior sheathing are installed.

Trim Options Line. This is our sander and planer, which we use to create a flat and even surface on our components.

This is the dado saw, where we cut window trim, stool stock, posts and stair components. The material is cut to length and then dado cut. angle cuts are made on the chop saw.

Timber Frame Line. This is our 5,000 lb. saw originally made for the us navy, and adapted by yankee barn homes to cut the notches in our post and beam frames.

In the timber frame shop, timbers come in cut to length, and are then notched. we have two lines of material that goes through this shop, and then a crane lifts finished components out the door.

True Roof Table Line. Here we frame the roof panels and square them up. Each panel gets plastic and strapping. A steel fence is then pulled up around the panels, ensuring that each panel is perfectly square.

Here interior v-groove is installed. The roof panel is flipped and insulation is installed. Next the plywood is put on, and pre-drilled.

Components arrive by truck to the building site. Since the frame is already cut and notched in the Yankee Barn frame shop, the barn raising can proceed smoothly.

Started second floor deck “A Yankee Barn goes up very easily, fits together well, and is substantially enclosed in a very short period of time, even when it’s built during the worst ice storm of the century,” said builder Ken Desjardins.

Roof beams in place. “Nothing compares for quality, how fast the product goes up, and the floor plan flexibility. A Yankee Barn can look anyway you want – a barn, a conventional house, even with stone on the exterior. There are no limitations to the design.”

Last of the True Wall panels lifted into place. “Yankee Barn is flexible and helpful. On this project, we made some last minute changes on site. Yankee Barn worked with us to build the components to make it work.”

True Roof® panels in place for a nearly weathertight shell. “The shell was built easily in two weeks.”

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