36721, 34165, 18203, 33529, 33528

Blue Collar Dumpsters LLC

Iowa, LA
  • Light Demolition
  • Residential Services
  • Small Structural Demolition
  • Locally owned
  • Affordable and professional
  • Free quotes

When you need a barn demolished and hauled away, Blue Collar Dumpsters LLC is happy to help! Our hardworking team of locals makes the demolition... more

Blue Collar Dumpsters LLC logo

Junk Removal Veterans LLC

DeRidder, LA
  • Commercial Buildings
  • Houses
  • Swimming Pools
  • Veteran owned and operated
  • Free consultations
  • Transparent pricing

At Junk Removal Veterans, we provide barn demolition services throughout DeRidder, Leesville, LA and the surrounding areas. You can count on us to safely tear... more

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Yancys Demolition LLC

Iowa, LA

Yancys Demolition LLC is licensed and insured to provide high-quality demolition services, including barn demolition, interior demolition, garage demolition, house demolition, and so much more.... more

YD

Bayou Rapides Corporation

Alexandria, LA

Serving central Louisiana, Bayou Rapides Corporation is a general contracting and demolition firm founded in 2003. Our team believes that quality barn demo is the result... more

BR

Site Work Specialist LLC

Alexandria, LA

Site Work Specialist LLC is a one-stop-shop in Alexandria LA for all your barn demolition needs! When you choose us, you are choosing quality, efficiency,... more

SW

Barn Demolition Tips for Grant, LA

How is a barn torn down?

When it comes to getting rid of an unwanted barn, especially if it doesn't have a significant amount of salvageable materials, traditional demolition is the most popular option, but it isn't the only option.

 

Option 1: Barn Demolition

Barn demolition is about as straightforward as it comes. With the help of heavy equipment, like a bulldozer or excavator, the barn is torn down from top to bottom, the debris is loaded into a dumpster and hauled away, and the site is leveled.

 

Option 2: Barn Deconstruction

Unlike barn demolition, barn deconstruction is performed by hand. Instead of bulldozing the entire barn, it is carefully dismantled piece by piece in order to salvage as much wood as possible. The deconstruction process is more labor-intensive than demolition. In other words, barn deconstruction takes more time and costs more money than barn demolition. Keep in mind though that the extra time and money it takes to deconstruct a barn can pay off in the end. If you plan on selling the salvaged barn wood, the money recouped could offset the cost of barn deconstruction. In the right cases, you could basically have your barn removed for little to no cost, while keeping material out of our landfills and our environment clean.