TAKING
CARE OF YOUR OLD BARN
New Uses for Old Barns
Consider adapting old barns to new uses when it is no longer possible to keep them for farming. Conversions to housing, offices, warehousing, retail use, restaurants, and community and recreational space have been successfully made. The challenge is to adapt the inside and outside, while retaining a barn's historic character. (See "Standards for Rehabilitation.")
Adapting a barn to a non-farm
use requires careful planning. Tax incentives are available for income-producing
uses, and the State of Vermont may have small matching grants (See "Barn-Aid
Programs"). Consult with building and design professionals to
learn as much as you can about the particulars of your barn before deciding
on a new use and layout. Keep in mind that for the barn to retain its historic
character, it will be best to maintain as much of the existing building
unchanged as possible. (If you plan to add onto your barn, see "TIP
# 10 - Make Changes and Additions With Care.")
Not all new uses fit in all barns.
A barn that might make good housing may not make a good gym. (Storage is
perhaps the one use suitable for most any former agricultural building.)
New uses that take advantage of the existing features of a building will
result in the most successful conversions. For example, barns with large
open, clear-span interiors will allow for installation or storage of industrial
equipment, while smaller barns with many existing stable windows will be
more readily adapted to housing or office space.
The exterior of your barn should
be changed as little as possible as you adapt to a new use. It is important
to retain slate roofs, weathered siding, old trim, windows, and doors as
visible evidence of the building's age. Add new windows in existing openings,
such as unused hay and barn doors. If more windows are needed, consult
with historic preservation design professionals about size and placement
if possible. (Generally, new wooden windows should match the size of existing
windows on the same barn level. They should be few in number and placed
and spaced so that they match the existing pattern of door and window openings
and do not call undue attention to themselves.) Rather than building large,
new structures close by your barn, maintain the area around it as open
as possible to preserve a sense of its agricultural setting.
The interior of your barn should be easy to adapt while retaining some historic elements. Leaving exposed framing in some areas and remnants of old stalls, pens, stanchions, or other animal enclosures will help keep something of the historic use and character of the barn. If possible, design an area where the barn's former open interior from floor to ceiling can be preserved, perhaps for an entry area or meeting room. Plan floor space to make the most of existing window openings and to minimize the need for new windows, which may greatly change the exterior appearance of your barn.
© 1995 Vermont Division for Historic Preservation and Vermont Housing and Conservation Board. All rights reserved.