Family Barndo Compound illustration
Construction Guide · Phase by Phase

How it gets built.

Every phase of a barndo build from pre-construction through closeout, with the Texas-specific decisions called out for each.

Belton, TX 15 phases v1.0
00 · Pre-Construction & Permits

Plans, permits, and a soil report.

Everything before the first concrete pour. The decisions here set the trajectory for cost, timeline, and what's even legal to build.

Site Survey & Soil Test

Plans & Engineering

County & ETJ Permits

Ag / Wildlife Exemption

Utility Pre-Planning

01 · Foundation

Concrete first.

The slab is the floor, the structure, and the future moisture barrier all in one. Mistakes here cascade through everything else.

Slab Design

Vapor Barrier & Moisture

Anchor Bolts & Tie-Downs

Pour Scheduling

Soil Report & Lenders

02 · Framing & Structural Shell

The skeleton.

Red-iron steel is what makes a barndo a barndo — clear spans, no interior load-bearing walls, fire-resistant, termite-proof.

Red-Iron Steel

Post-Frame Alternative

Wind Engineering

Loft & Mezzanine

Termite Protection

03 · Roofing

Standing seam.

Standing-seam metal is the only roof that makes sense for a Central Texas barndo. The math on lifespan and insurance is overwhelming.

Standing Seam Metal

Hail Resistance

Roof Insulation Integration

Eaves & Overhangs

Cool-Roof Coatings

04 · Exterior Envelope

Walls, glass, doors.

What you see from the road. The envelope decisions also set the energy bill for the next 30 years.

Siding

Windows

Exterior Doors

Porches & Overhangs

Color & Reflectivity

05 · Plumbing

Water in, water out.

Where the building meets the well, the septic, and the propane tank. Rural plumbing decisions look nothing like suburban plumbing.

Well & Water Supply

Septic / OSSF

DWV & PEX Layout

Water Heaters

Water Softening

06 · Electrical

Wires, panels, generators.

Service drop to subpanel to outlet. Steel structures bring their own bonding rules, and rural electric service brings its own quirks.

Service Entry & Panel

Subpanels

Steel Bonding & Grounding

240V Circuits & EV

Backup Power & Solar Pre-Wire

07 · HVAC & Climate Control

Cooling a barndo in July.

The largest energy load in the building, by far. Get the design wrong and you'll fight it for 20 years.

Mini-Split Zoning

Manual J Load Calc

Humidity & Stratification

Mechanical Ventilation

08 · Insulation & Air Sealing

Spray foam, every time.

The most underrated line item in a Texas build. Spending extra here pays back faster than any other upgrade.

Roof Deck Foam

Wall Insulation

Air Sealing & Blower Door

Foundation Perimeter

09 · Interior Build-Out

Drywall, paint, doors, cabinetry.

The visible finishes. Restraint here is the difference between a barndo that ages gracefully and one that looks dated in five years.

Drywall & Finishes

Doors & Hardware

Cabinetry

Trim & Millwork

Paint

10 · Flooring

Floors — by room and by building.

The largest visible surface in every room. Different buildings need different floors — this section breaks them down.

Polished Concrete

LVP (Luxury Vinyl Plank)

Wet Areas

Workshop & Garage

Porches & Outdoor

11 · Kitchen & Bath

Kitchens for shared family meals.

The shared kitchen is the social heart of the compound. The bathrooms are where every visitor judges the build quality.

Kitchen Layout

Appliances

Countertops

Bathroom Design

Ventilation

12 · Smart Home, Security & Connectivity

Wi-Fi, cameras, and the network closet.

The infrastructure that turns a building into a connected home. Steel framing and rural connectivity both change how this gets designed.

Network Closet & Wiring

Wi-Fi Mesh

Internet Service

Security Cameras & Locks

Smart Thermostats & Zones

13 · Site Work & Landscaping

Drives, drainage, native plants.

Everything outside the buildings. In Texas, drainage matters more than landscaping — flash floods take out projects every year.

Driveway & Access

Drainage & Flood

Native Landscaping

Fencing

Outdoor Lighting

14 · Inspections, Warranty & Closeout

Inspections and the punch list.

The last 5% of the project. Sloppy closeout creates warranty headaches for the next decade.

Phase Inspections

TCEQ Septic Inspection

Builder & Manufacturer Warranties

Final Walkthroughs & HERS