How much would a unistrut system cost for 4000 sf?Is this permitted?
Have you looked into unistrut?
Google “unistrut ceiling grid”
Any back of envelope calculation anyone can give?
How much would a unistrut system cost for 4000 sf?Is this permitted?
Have you looked into unistrut?
Google “unistrut ceiling grid”
Pulling your own permit and doing your own work is only permitted if A) you own the property, and B) it is a residential dwelling. ie., it must be your own home that you own. It can't be a commercial space. (I lived in Calgary for nearly 10 years before moving to BC).Here in Alberta and in most other places too I think you're allowed to install your own wiring but it has to be inspected and permitted to be legal.
Pay an electrician, they will bring in a crew with a scissor lift or two and knock it out in short order. They will hang strut channel, pull power, hang lights, hook up a contactor bank. All good to go.Well my issue is hanging the lights. I don’t see myself hanging lights from 25 feet. I’d be hanging about 160-200 fixtures (if LED).
So when you say build a 2nd floor are you suggesting racks?
I have no idea. But I would def take @Renfro ’s advice. He’s a sparky. Being that you are needing to pass inspections, I would imagine that whole strut channel overhead system needs to be engineered? and/or installed to a building code and a sparky will/should know.How much would a unistrut system cost for 4000 sf?
Any back of envelope calculation anyone can give?
sounds good. thanks everyone. Appreciate all the insight.I have no idea. But I would def take @Renfro ’s advice. He’s a sparky. Being that you are needing to pass inspections, I would imagine that whole strut channel overhead system needs to be engineered? and/or installed to a building code and a sparky will/should know.
Poor you, with your really high ceilings lolsounds good. thanks everyone. Appreciate all the insight.
Have a great New Year! Any creative ideas still welcome!
I was just thinking a two tier grow opp. That would be insane! Put a rack at 7' and still have 6' from top of warehouse too the canopy on the 2nd rack.I don't see that as a problem at all. You can grow some trees in there and not have to worry about them getting too tall. Gonna need a tall ladder though, lol.
Exactly, do it yourself and the licensed pros get to charge more to tear it out and do it all again. Permits have to be pulled by licensed pros since it's commercial there is only DIY p[ainting and stuff like that. Nothing structural, mechanical, electrical or plumbing can be done by the owner unless they happen to be licensed commercial contractor and even then they would sub out what they aren't trained in like say electrical or plumbing or HVAC.I have no idea. But I would def take @Renfro ’s advice. He’s a sparky. Being that you are needing to pass inspections, I would imagine that whole strut channel overhead system needs to be engineered? and/or installed to a building code and a sparky will/should know.
Hmmmm... what to do?Hello All - currently planning an indoor grow but I'm realizing all the warehouses around me have minimum 20 foot high ceilings - 30 ft.
Does anyone have any suggestions on how to best "fix" this problem or perhaps take advantage of this variable? I'm still in the decision making process of using LED's or HPS considering I have all 4 seasons being on the east coast. So I'm open to suggestions as high ceilings may/may not benefit a particular fixture.