Madman
Registered

The bottom line about building outdoors is quality. Usually quality requires two things, money and/or effort. And as I mentioned earlier, in this thread, lack of frivolous detail is a big help in maintaining our garden railways for the long haul.
Pola structures are expensive, but mine have been outdoors for years. I found out early on that gutters, downspouts, awnings, spindly awning posts, etc., even on Pola buildings don't hold up well in a ground level layout. When I built the kits, I reinforced the structure with caulking along the inside corners of the walls and added extra struts to the roofs so that when removing them they would remain solidly intact.
So I may have spent more than I would have liked to in the beginning in $$$$$$ (#####s for you Brits) and labored more than was necessary in perfecting "Brick Sh-t Houses", but in the long run I believe it was worth it.
Pola structures are expensive, but mine have been outdoors for years. I found out early on that gutters, downspouts, awnings, spindly awning posts, etc., even on Pola buildings don't hold up well in a ground level layout. When I built the kits, I reinforced the structure with caulking along the inside corners of the walls and added extra struts to the roofs so that when removing them they would remain solidly intact.
So I may have spent more than I would have liked to in the beginning in $$$$$$ (#####s for you Brits) and labored more than was necessary in perfecting "Brick Sh-t Houses", but in the long run I believe it was worth it.