New commercial sheds should be installed only when the simple renovation of existing sheds cannot return high quality and long-lasting refurbished building
2. This is the question often asked by a businessman to himself. To repeat the question for
you: Should you simply renovate your existing storage sheds or will you need to
establish new ones?
There are, of course, a number of factors to consider before coming up with the best
answer.
Listed below are the things involved to help you in the process of decision:
1. You should consider establishing a new shed if the existing sheds have reached
its 10th year. While structural guarantees of excellent sheds may run up to 10 years, in
some cases the promise would simply be broken. Upon reaching 10 long years of
service, a shed may have already deteriorated significantly. Renovating it would only
return half of the efficiency you can expect from a brand new shed installed using the
same weight of financial investment. Also, the new shed can perform quite well for
another 10 years while the renovated one can only run for as good as five years.
2. You should consider renovating sheds if there are only minimal damages due to
some unexpected circumstances. While the calculation for the guaranteed years of
service involves the factor or parameter representing natural disasters that might be
encountered within the shed’s lifetime, there still are unexpected circumstances that can
cause large-scale physical damages to the shed. Although physically large, such
damages are not always of the kind that can make the building less secure or sturdy.
Simple renovation would thus be sufficient in this case.
3. You may consider establishing a new shed if you only have one shed currently in
service. You may also consider renovating the currently operating shed while the new
construction has been going on. At the end of the day, you will have—in case you are a
farmer—two farm sheds which can be held in operation at the same time.
Well, you have just explored three of the most feasible options for the question
presented above. As you might have noticed, the options have been considered through
the efficiency of the investment you would be making for either the renovation or the
installation. Generally, if renovation costs would be much higher than installation costs,
and if the resulting building is still less in quality in terms of the years of service it can
hold, then it will be much better to go for installation. Generally, renovation is fit for
relatively newer or middle-aged buildings.