• Meeech
    link
    1410 months ago

    Dude my sincere condolences. I hope you’re able to get it all back up and reinforced soon.

    • @[email protected]OPM
      link
      fedilink
      English
      610 months ago

      Thank you. The steel frame was set into the concrete pad that the greenhouse was built upon. It is almost certainly totaled now

  • @ramenshaman
    link
    1110 months ago

    Was that just from the weight of the snow?

    • @[email protected]OPM
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1210 months ago

      Lots of snow, freezing raining, then more snow, then more freezing rain… The weather has just been brutal for a couple weeks now here

      • @ramenshaman
        link
        510 months ago

        Oof, sorry to hear that. I hope rebuilding goes smoothly.

      • @schmidtster
        link
        5
        edit-2
        10 months ago

        That absolutely blows, but did anyone think of clearing the snow? We’ve built these style of sheds in the past and they have snow ratings so you know when you need to start thinking about preventive maintenance.

        Edit, and wouldn’t cleaning the snow increase your natural light efficiency too? How much light would a foot of snow filter out?

        • @[email protected]OPM
          link
          fedilink
          English
          410 months ago

          Thankfully, the greenhouse wasn’t currently in use, so we didn’t lose any plants.
          Unfortunately tho, the propane had been disconnected from it while waiting for some repairs. So there wasn’t really anyway to melt or clear the snow from it fast enough. The greenhouse that is in use suffered a bit of bending to the frame too, even with the heat cranked up and us trying to manually remove the snowpack from the gutters.

          We’ve been getting hammered with the weather here…

          • @schmidtster
            link
            310 months ago

            That’s good that there was no product.

            For what it’s worth, the gutters are the last of your concern, they can hold the snow on the roof, but it’s the roof the snow manually needs to be removed from.

            Always fun contracting a snow removal company to climb on your roof when the snow is expected to total over the snowload calculations. I get it though, companies are cheap, bottom lines too meet and it’s sometimes worth chancing it.