Kentucky & Tennessee Structures LLC

Farm Shop Builder
Serving Kentucky and Tennessee

When your equipment needs a real home and your operation needs a place to get work done, KY TN Structures delivers. We build custom farm shops across Kentucky and Tennessee for farmers, ranchers, and rural property owners who are done improvising. Properly sized, properly built, and designed around how your farm actually runs — not a generic floor plan that almost fits.

15+

Years Experience

100%

Turnkey Available

50MI

Service Radius

KY + TN

Communities Served

Post Frame Farm Shops in KY & TN

Stop Working Around a Building That Wasn't Built for You

A good farm shop changes how an operation runs. Equipment stays protected and ready. Repairs happen on your schedule instead of the weather's. You stop losing hours hunting for tools or working in conditions that would be unacceptable anywhere else.

Post frame construction is the right system for farm shops because it produces exactly what working farms need — wide, clear-span interiors with no interior columns interrupting floor space, overhead clearance for large equipment, and a structure engineered to take the kind of daily punishment that agricultural use puts on a building.

Farmers across Kentucky and Tennessee know the cost of not having adequate covered space. A tractor left outside through a hard winter, a planter that rusts because there was nowhere proper to store it, repairs that get delayed because there's no covered workspace — it adds up fast. A well-built farm shop from KY TN Structures pays for itself by protecting equipment, improving efficiency, and keeping your operation running regardless of what the weather is doing.

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Protect Your Equipment Investment

Tractors, combines, planters, and implements represent serious money. A properly built farm shop keeps that investment under roof, out of the elements, and ready to work when you need it — not sitting in a field deteriorating between seasons.

Built Around Your Workflow

The door goes where your equipment enters, not where it's easiest to frame. The bays are sized for what you're actually parking. The workspace is positioned for how you actually work. We design farm shops around operations, not blueprints.

Built for Hard Daily Use

Pressure-treated posts, heavy-gauge steel roofing and siding, concrete floors that handle loaded equipment. These buildings are engineered for agricultural loads and Tennessee and Kentucky weather — not residential-grade construction scaled up and called a farm shop.

What We Build and How We Build It

Custom Farm Shop Construction Across Kentucky and Tennessee

No two farming operations are identical. The farm shop we build for a grain operation in Logan County looks different from the one we build for a cattle ranch in Christian County or a horse property outside Clarksville. Here's what goes into getting it right.

Equipment Storage Solutions

Getting equipment storage right starts with knowing what you're parking. Tractors, combines, sprayers, planters, utility vehicles, and trailers all have different clearance and footprint requirements — and the door openings have to match the largest thing moving in and out, not a standard size that causes daily headaches. We account for all of it upfront so the finished building actually functions the way you need it to. Property owners across Todd County, Montgomery County, and Robertson County rely on these buildings to keep their machinery protected year-round.

Custom Workshop Spaces

A farm shop without proper workspace is just a storage building. Most working farms need a dedicated maintenance area — concrete flooring, an overhead door sized for pulling equipment in for service, a welding corner with room to actually maneuver, wall-mounted tool storage, and a workbench in a position that gets used. We work these details into the design from the start rather than leaving you to retrofit a workshop into a building that wasn't laid out for one.

Designed for Agricultural Operations


Clear-span post frame interiors mean no interior columns dictating where equipment parks or where workflow happens. Door placement is designed around how equipment moves on your specific site. And if your operation is growing, we can build in provisions for future expansion now so adding square footage later is straightforward rather than a full rebuild.

Turnkey Farm Shop Construction


We handle everything — site prep, post setting, framing, roofing, siding, concrete, and doors. You don't manage subcontractors or coordinate material deliveries while trying to run a farming operation at the same time. When we're done, the building is ready to put to work.

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Get A Free Quote

Ready to build? Contact Kentucky Tenessee Structures today for a free, no-obligation quote on your project.

I'm ready to build

call us today

(270) 604-0934

How It Works

Our Farm Shop Building Process

1

Consultation & Vision Planning

We talk through your equipment, your operation, your site, and your budget. No generic pitch — a real conversation that shapes the design from the first call.

2

Custom Design

Floor plan, door placement, bay sizing, concrete layout, and site-specific details finalized. Permitting coordination handled where required.

3

Construction

Site prep, framing, roofing, siding, concrete, and doors — managed start to finish by our crew on a timeline we stick to.

4

Move In Ready

Walkthrough complete, building finished, ready to use the same day we leave.

Get In Touch

Your Operation Deserves a Shop That Keeps Up With It.

We'll Get Back to You Within 24 Hours

We work with farmers and rural property owners throughout Kentucky and Tennessee — from Hopkinsville and Russellville to Clarksville, Springfield, and beyond. Reach out and here's what you can expect: free consultations with no pressure, custom designs built around your operation, full turnkey options, and fast response times because we know your time matters.

Free consultations — no cost, no pressure

Custom solutions built around your property and budget

Turnkey options — we handle everything start to finish

Fast response times — we get back to you quickly

FAQ

Common Questions About Farm Shops.

What size farm shop do I need?

It depends on what you're storing and how you plan to use the space. A basic equipment building for a smaller operation might start at 40x60, while a full working shop with multiple equipment bays, a maintenance area, and tool storage often runs 60x80 or larger. The right answer comes from a conversation about your specific equipment list and workflow — not a guess at a round number. We help you size the building around what you're actually running, with room to grow if your operation expands.

Cost depends on size, configuration, materials, and finish level. A basic enclosed post frame equipment building costs less than a fully outfitted working shop with concrete floors, overhead doors, insulation, and electrical rough-in. Most farm shops we build across Kentucky and Tennessee range from $25 to $50 or more per square foot depending on specifications. The most reliable number comes from a free consultation — we build quotes around your actual project, not a ballpark that changes once construction is underway.

Beyond equipment storage, a well-built farm shop handles daily maintenance and repairs, welding and fabrication, chemical and seed storage, hay and feed storage, and covered workspace for the tasks that used to happen outside regardless of weather. The clear-span post frame interior means multiple uses can coexist in the same building without getting in each other's way — which is exactly how most working farms in Kentucky and Tennessee actually need to operate.

Because it produces the clear-span interiors, overhead clearance, and structural strength that agricultural buildings actually require. No interior columns. No foundation complexity that drives up cost and timeline. Post frame goes up faster, costs less per square foot than conventional construction, and is engineered for the real loads — heavy equipment, wind, snow — that Kentucky and Tennessee farming operations put on a building every single day.