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When I built my shop I use a metal wainscot as well. Just galvanized roofing. You can install similar furring on the inside face of the posts and attach the wainscot and drywall above it. It was cheaper for me to install the metal than it was to have my sheet rockers and painters install the drywall. If you’re doing the drywall and painting yourself that would change the equation but I promised myself I wouldn’t hang and tape drywall any more.As far as wall finishes go... I will probably do metal for the bottom 3-4 feet and plywood for the rest. For the reasons you said.

It's about the volume of the interior space you're conditioning (HVAC). If you spray foam the underside of your roof deck, the interior volume of the conditioned space includes the entire area above the ceiling below. Usually, this done for exposed structure occupancies where there is no ceiling- like warehouses, and shops...Can you elaborate on this? Thanks
It's about the volume of the interior space you're conditioning (HVAC). If you spray foam the underside of your roof deck, the interior volume of the conditioned space includes the entire area above the ceiling below. Usually, this done for exposed structure occupancies where there is no ceiling- like warehouses, and shops...
With an insulated ceiling, only the area/cf under the ceiling is conditioned which requires less tonnage due to the smaller area.
There's a lot that goes into planning before any structure is built, and failing to consider critical items can tank a project and blow the budget out of the water.
Like... if you're conditioning a shop or garage space, you need insulated doors- including overhead roll-ups.
I recently completed construction of a supermarket for a well-known national chain. Somehow, some way, the mechanical engineer thought it would be just fine to have the entire back-of-house unconditioned- no HVAC whatsoever, and this is in Florida. No problem at the time we completed the store in March, but i knew the debt would come due. By May, as temps climbed into the 90's, millions of dollars in state-of-the-art coolers and freezers around the perimeter of the store sweating profusely and unable to maintain temperature, they had to empty out half the store and bring in several large, portable water-cooled air conditioners for the back of house.
I relate this story only to stress that it's far best to have a complete plan down to the equipment and finishes before sticking a shovel in the dirt. Design mistakes or omissions can be very costly to rectify.
LMAO...That sounds like the Aldi in Fishawk.
They had a ton of problems with their freezers for about 8 months.
Maybe it’s a metric conversion?Wow, R30 fiberglass batts, I've never seen an Rvalue above 10.
Here in New Zealand fibreglass wall batts for 4" walls (90mm cavity) are R2.2-2.8, and for 5" (140mm) wall cavity R3.2-4.3, ceiling batts R2.9-7.4
You must either have some super duper fiberglass or there must be a different way of measuring R value.
Somebody mentioned lining the walls with plywood or drywall, I love plywood, although more expensive than drywall, if you use thick enough plywood you can hang just about anything anywhere
I had exposed flooor joists in my basement and installed batts and a ceiling, somehow the areas seemed smaller.I was told insulating the roof, like spray foam on the rafters was more efficient than putting in a ceiling and insulation it. Not sure if its true but I chose to do that because I like the head room. Feels more roomy and the burning oil smoke can dissipate more. I had 14 foot ceilings in MT. and liked that a lot.
I solved the problem of oil streaks on the wall by hanging an easy wipe sheet of acrylic.It'll be metal on the bottom 3-4 feet so it can be wiped down/cleaned easily. The rest will be plywood, like Kiwi said, it makes things easy for attaching shelves, power strips, cabinets, etc .
I solved the problem of oil streaks on the wall by hanging an easy wipe sheet of acrylic.
Oil streaks are easy to clean and every so often I change the sheet, and if you use the right colour acrylic you can’t see the streaks.
I also use the acrylic sheets as a splash back in certain areas, the benefit is flat walls and the ability to attach things to the wall anywhere, even cabinets to prevent tip over.

How do you insulate the gap at the top of the roll up doors?The weather here has been incredibly punishing the past 2 weeks. First day today above freezing. Found a local post frame builder who is going to install a metal ceiling next week, so I'm busy taking down lights / garage door rails etc so they have a clean slate. They're also putting up the dividing wall.
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