America's Best Shops - 2

A Shop for Generations

Dan Miller
By  Dan Miller , Progressive Farmer Senior Editor
The overhead door of the Vahles' shop is 32 feet wide and 16 feet high. The shop was built to hold most of the farm's large line of equipment. (DTN/The Progressive Farmer photo by Ted Schurter)

JERSEYVILLE, Ill. (DTN) -- The Vahle operation, outside Jerseyville, Illinois, is undergoing a generational change, and Gary Vahle has used this time to add a key piece of infrastructure to the corn and soybean farm.

Gary's sons, Brad and Brian, are buying out their uncles, Jim and David, and the investment is a 72- by 176-foot Morton Buildings shop. The center of the shop features a 20-foot ceiling. It's the farm's second Morton structure, this one built over six weeks and located north of the Mississippi River town of Alton, Illinois.

"We needed another building for the boys that they can grow into," Gary said. The gray building, with a charcoal-colored band of wainscoting, was built to hold most of the farm's large line of equipment. "We can pretty well do what we need to do in here," Gary said.

FINISHED AND NOT

The shop is divided into two main areas -- finished space and a large, cold-weather storage space. The cold-weather storage space was built to keep the farming equipment out of the weather and the semis free of rain, ice and snow while the family is hauling grain.

The entire building sits on a poured concrete foundation wall rising 1 foot above the floor level. None of the building's three-member laminated columns are in contact with the ground. The columns are mounted to the top of the foundation wall with heavy fabricated steel U-shaped column sockets. The walls in the finished portion of the shop hold blankets of R-19 insulation. The ceiling is finished with acoustical panels; insulation blown in over R-30 roll fiberglass insulation is above the panels.

TWO EXITS

The finished work area measures 72 by 72 feet. This space opens to the outside by way of two overhead doors (the doors each include a row of windows). A 32-foot-wide by 16-foot-tall overhead door opens on the front of the building. The second overhead door, 18 feet wide by 15 feet tall opens up on one side of the building. Just inside this door is a large compressor with enough hose to reach any work parked outside on a concrete pad. This area doubles as a wash bay, with wastewater taken away through a drainage grate in the floor.

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The Vahles added a nice design touch in the area of the largest door. Insulated walk (or service) doors are located on the sidewalls of the building on either side of the overhead door. The two doors greatly improve access to the shop when the overhead door is closed. To dress up the building a bit, they added three cupolas and a 3-foot-wide eyebrow overhang. The overhang offers cover over one of the walk doors during inclement weather.

The back portion of the building is 104 by 72 feet and is used for cold-weather storage. The floor is gravel. A continuous 104-foot-long strip of translucent 3-foot-wide fiberglass panel is installed across the top of the back wall for lighting. Otherwise, this space is lighted by high bay LEDs. Entrance to the cold-weather storage area is by way of an insulated walk door and a 34-foot-wide AlumaSteel sliding door. This space is large enough for semitrailers and combines.

The Vahles created a large, gravel staging area outside, giving all-weather access to the shop and a dry weather area for less complicated maintenance and repairs. There are concrete pads at each door. The Vahles want the rest of the area to settle before pouring additional concrete.

BUILT FOR WORK

This is a building equipped with a well-planned backbone. Noticeable are the numerous electrical outlets mounted to the interior walls. Power for the outlets is delivered inside through runs of PVC piping set under the floor. Empty runs of PVC were added for future expansion. The shop is wired for welding in three locations.

Main shop lighting is provided by 20 overhead LEDs, with six bulbs in each fixture. "They put out a lot of good light," Gary said. A handful of double-pane insulated windows are mounted around the shop, but most of the wall space has been preserved for future storage and work areas.

QUICK HEAT

Heat is provided by four ceiling-mounted radiant heaters -- one hanging from each of the four corners of the ceiling. "Everyone told me to put heat in the concrete floor," Gary said. "But, I'm not here a lot." The temperature in the shop can be held to about 40 degrees Fahrenheit in winter when no one is there. Gary said he can warm the space to about 60 F in only a few minutes when winter work needs to be done. Heating cost about $300 during the 2017-18 winter.

The Vahles are finishing an office and kitchen space. It includes a window and porcelain floor tile imprinted to look like wood, with a desk, sink, stove and refrigerator. The space is accessed from inside the finished shop, but the actual space for the office area is carved out from the cold-weather storage on the other side of the wall. "That keeps the main shop square," Gary explained.

The top of the office will be used for shelving and the storage of supplies. A set of stairs has already been built up to the roof area of the office.

"We can pretty much do what we want to do here," Brad said. "I like the overhead doors. We can pull in here and have a place to work. We have had problems getting stuff into and out of our other sheds."

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Editor's Note:

This is the second story in DTN/The Progressive Farmer's series on America's Best Shops where growers share their resourceful and innovative ideas for indoor workspaces.

Next in the series: A South Dakota farmer who worked on dirt floor for decades decided it would be a big plus for his new shop to have a heated, cement floor.

Dan Miller can be reached at dan.miller@dtn.com

Follow him on Twitter @DMillerPF

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Dan Miller