Barn Dismantling and Demolition in Lyle, MN

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Johanns Tiling & Excavating

3596 Timber Ave, Osage IA 50461

Family-owned since 1976, Johanns Tiling & Excavating has been proudly providing demolition services to customers all over Northern Iowa and Southern Minnesota. With many investments in equipment over our 40+ years in the industry, our team is equipped to handle a wide range ...

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Mckiness Excavating Inc

12 N Taft Ave, Mason City IA 50401

McKiness Excavating Inc has been the premier demolition contractor in North Iowa for over 80 years through three generations of leadership. Our family-owned company values hard work, transparency, and reliability.

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RDS Trucking Inc.

27739 890th Ave, Austin MN 55912

Throughout Austin, MN, RDS Trucking Inc. is known for our responsive, honest, and competitively priced services. We are committed to providing each and every one of our customers with the barn demolition services they need at a price that is ...

Barn Demolition Tips for Lyle, MN

Tips for Removing a Barn

How is a barn torn down?

When it comes to getting rid of an unwanted barn, especially if it doesn't have a significant amount of salvageable materials, traditional demolition is the most popular option, but it isn't the only option.

 

Option 1: Barn Demolition

Barn demolition is about as straightforward as it comes. With the help of heavy equipment, like a bulldozer or excavator, the barn is torn down from top to bottom, the debris is loaded into a dumpster and hauled away, and the site is leveled.

 

Option 2: Barn Deconstruction

Unlike barn demolition, barn deconstruction is performed by hand. Instead of bulldozing the entire barn, it is carefully dismantled piece by piece in order to salvage as much wood as possible. The deconstruction process is more labor-intensive than demolition. In other words, barn deconstruction takes more time and costs more money than barn demolition. Keep in mind though that the extra time and money it takes to deconstruct a barn can pay off in the end. If you plan on selling the salvaged barn wood, the money recouped could offset the cost of barn deconstruction. In the right cases, you could basically have your barn removed for little to no cost, while keeping material out of our landfills and our environment clean.