Moving a Barn to higher ground

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cornbread

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News report from Bruno , NE In 1981, Herman Ostry and his wife, Donna, bought a farm a half mile outside of Bruno , Nebraska , a small community sixty miles west of Omaha . The property had a creek and came with a barn built in the 1920's. The barn floor was always wet and muddy. When the creek flooded in 1988, the barn ended up with 29 inches of water covering the floor. That was the last straw. Ostry needed to move it to higher ground.

He contacted a building moving company and was discouraged by the bid. One night around the table, Ostry commented that if they had enough people they could pick the barn up and move it to higher ground.. Everyone laughed.

A few days later, Ostry’s son Mike showed his father some calculations. He had counted the individual boards and timbers in the barn and estimated that the barn weighed approximately 16,640 pounds. He also estimated that a steel grid needed to move the barn would add another 3,150 pounds, bringing the total weight to just under 10 tons. He figured it would take around 350 people with each person lifting 56 lbs. to move the barn.
The town of Bruno, Nebraska was planning its centennial celebration in late July of 1988. Herman and Mike presented their barn moving idea to the committee. The committee decided to make it part of their celebration.

So, on July 30, 1988, shortly before 11 a.m., a quick test lift was successfully made. Then, as local television cameras and 4,000 people from eleven states watched, 350 people moved the barn 115 feet south and 6 feet higher up a gentle slope and set it on its ne w foundation.

The reason most people think that something cannot be done is because they know that they can’t do it by themselves. But impossible things can be done if we join together in the task.. Working together, we can not only move barns, but change the world.

Click here
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o83W0gj_CRE
 
:shock: That's pretty **** neat! Brings new meaning to the old term "barn raising". 8)



I think I would prefer to be on the outside, just in case something went wrong and I could run like hell away from it. :shock:
 
When I had a house on Lake Rayburn in East Texas, a man needed to move his house approx 200' because of high water erosion earlier that year. A moving company came in with a small bull dozier, several men. They cut several pine trees down in the woods close by, jacked up the house, set it on the logs and rolled it over to the new location.
 
Somewhere around 1962 or so, my father in law....who was about 5' 6 inches tall...needed his garage moved from one side of the house to the other. He thought he could do everything. Sometimes he was right.

He laid a concrete slab in the new location.

He gathered his two sons; myself; and a couple of other guys in the neighborhood. He pryed and jacked up the garage's sole plate. It rose about six inches. He placed a couple of large pipes under the base-plate. He continued prying and jacking until he had pipe sections under the entire garage base.

Rolling slowly, the 20 x20 ft garage was moved into the ally. Pipes were placed under the wood and inch by inch that d%$# garage was moved about 200 feet. My wife's dad was a truck driver and had a marvelous mind.

regards, Rich
 

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