Sale
30x36x12 Triple Wide Metal Garage with Lean-To
Delivery & Install Included
Metal buildings in Texas are a practical choice for homeowners, ranchers, farmers, contractors, RV owners and business owners who need dependable protection for vehicles, tools, livestock supplies, hay, trailers, tractors, boats and commercial storage. Texas weather can include extreme heat, intense sun exposure, hail, high wind, tornado-producing storms, Gulf Coast hurricanes, drought, flooding and expansive clay soils, so choosing the right metal building means planning around more than size alone.
From Houston and Dallas to Austin, the Hill Country, West Texas ranchland, the Panhandle, East Texas farms and Gulf Coast properties, metal buildings in Texas should be matched to the property, the weather exposure and the intended use. A simple open carport may work well for basic shade and vehicle coverage, while a fully enclosed garage, barn, RV cover or commercial building may be better for long-term storage, agricultural use, ranch work, equipment protection or business needs.
Different metal buildings in Texas solve different storage and property needs. Some buyers need shade and overhead protection from sun, rain and hail. Others need enclosed storage for tools, tractors, livestock supplies, business inventory, RVs, hay, cotton equipment or ranch equipment. Before choosing a size or roof style, start with the main purpose of the structure.
Metal garages are a strong option for vehicle storage, workshops, tool protection, equipment storage and small business use. A fully enclosed garage can help protect cars, trucks, motorcycles, ATVs, UTVs, mowers, tools and stored items from hail, sun exposure, dust, wind-driven debris, heavy rain and theft concerns.
When planning metal garages in Texas, think about more than the number of vehicles. Buyers should also consider door height, wall height, interior clearance, workbench space, storage shelves, ventilation, insulation, dust control, drainage, driveway access and whether the building will sit in a high-wind, flood-prone or coastal area. A two-car garage may handle basic parking, but a wider or longer building may be better if the space will also be used for tools, equipment, storage or a workshop.
Metal carports are useful for open-air protection. They can cover cars, trucks, tractors, trailers, boats, lawn equipment, hay equipment, ranch tools and farm implements without requiring a fully enclosed structure.
Carports are helpful in Texas because they provide shade from intense sun and overhead protection from hail and rain. A basic open carport may be enough for simple vehicle coverage, while a partially enclosed carport can add more protection from wind-driven rain or dust. Site placement and anchoring matter because a carport should be easy to access, properly secured and placed where runoff will not collect around the posts or pad.
Metal barns are commonly used on ranches, farms, acreage lots, horse properties and rural homesites. They can provide space for hay, feed, tractors, livestock supplies, implements, cotton equipment, cattle equipment, horse equipment and general agricultural storage.
Texas barns often need large door openings, tall sidewalls and open interior space for farm and ranch equipment. If the building will be used around animals, shade and ventilation should be planned early. If the barn will store hay, feed, cotton-related tools or machinery, moisture control, roof strength and easy vehicle access are important.
Metal RV covers are designed to protect campers, travel trailers, fifth wheels, motorhomes and boats from intense sun, hail, heavy rain, falling limbs and seasonal storms. Texas heat and UV exposure can be hard on RV roofs, seals, vents, slide-outs, paint and exterior plastics, especially when an RV sits uncovered for long periods.
Height is the most important detail when choosing metal RV covers in Texas. Many RVs need 12-foot, 14-foot or taller clearance depending on the model. Width and length matter too. Extra space makes it easier to open doors, access storage compartments, walk around the RV and keep more of the vehicle protected from direct weather exposure.
Commercial metal buildings can support shops, warehouses, service businesses, agricultural operations, equipment storage, ranch support buildings, contractor yards, mechanic shops and other business uses. These buildings often require more planning because they may involve occupancy rules, utilities, parking, fire access, drainage, insulation, engineering, wind-load documentation and local review.
Before choosing a commercial building, define the intended use clearly. A warehouse, farm support building, repair shop, retail storage space, equipment shed, fabrication shop or service building may all have different planning needs. Early review can help prevent issues with access, permits, utilities, site layout and future expansion.
The best metal buildings in Texas are selected by use, exposure and site conditions. A buyer near the Gulf Coast may need to think carefully about wind-rated doors, corrosion exposure, floodplain review and hurricane-related rainfall. A buyer in North Texas may be more focused on hail, tornado-producing storms and expansive clay soils. A buyer in West Texas may need more attention to sun, heat, dust, drought, wind and ranch access.
For daily vehicle storage, a fully enclosed garage is usually the most protective option. For affordable shade and hail coverage, a carport may be enough. For farms and ranches, barns provide the most flexible interior space. For campers, boats and motorhomes, an RV cover provides height and roof coverage without forcing the buyer into a full garage. For business use, commercial metal buildings offer more flexibility for large doors, insulation, offices, equipment bays and code-driven layouts.
Metal buildings in Texas should also be compared by how well they manage heat and airflow. Enclosed buildings are more secure, but they need ventilation to reduce trapped heat and condensation. Open buildings ventilate naturally, but they provide less protection from wind-driven rain, dust and theft. Buildings near the coast should be planned with corrosion resistance and maintenance in mind. Buildings on clay-heavy soils should be planned around drainage, pad preparation and foundation movement.
The roof is one of the most important decisions for metal buildings in Texas. Roof style affects heat gain, rain runoff, wind performance, hail exposure, maintenance and the long-term condition of the building.
A vertical roof is often the best all-around choice for Texas. Vertical panels run from the ridge down toward the eaves, which helps rain, leaves, dust and debris move off the roof more efficiently. This is helpful in a state where severe storms, tropical downpours, hail, dust and high heat can all affect the same building.
For larger garages, barns, RV covers and enclosed buildings, a vertical roof is usually worth considering. It can reduce the chance of water sitting on seams and can make the building easier to maintain over time. A vertical roof is especially useful where thunderstorms bring heavy rain in a short period or where dust and debris can collect on flatter roof surfaces.
An A-frame roof gives a building a clean, traditional look. When paired with vertical panels, it can provide both good appearance and strong weather-shedding performance. Many buyers choose A-frame vertical roofs for garages, workshops, barns and RV covers because they look finished while still handling rain and runoff well.
For Texas properties with visible roadside frontage, neighborhood restrictions or business use, an A-frame roof may also look more polished than a basic utility roof. It can work well for both residential and commercial properties when the building needs to look clean from the road.
A regular roof can work for smaller, budget-focused structures in lighter-use situations. However, it may not be the best choice for every Texas property. If the building is large, enclosed, exposed to high wind, located near the coast, used for valuable equipment or expected to handle hail exposure, a stronger roof style may be the better long-term decision.
The right roof for metal buildings in Texas should be based on the property location, expected use, surrounding exposure, drainage needs, wind exposure, hail risk and storm exposure.
Texas heat makes roof color worth considering. Lighter roof colors may help reduce heat absorption, especially for garages, barns, shops and RV covers in open sun. Ventilation, ridge vents, wall vents, insulation and shade planning can also make enclosed buildings more comfortable.
Texas storms can also produce fast runoff. Gutters, downspouts, splash blocks, gravel edges and proper grading can help move water away from the building. This is especially important where clay soils hold moisture or where the building pad sits near a driveway, low area, drainage ditch, creek, flood-prone site or coastal property.
The NOAA/NCEI Texas State Climate Summary describes Texas as having hot summers, varied precipitation and Gulf moisture affecting the eastern part of the state. For metal building buyers, that makes roof selection, heat control, drainage and site planning important from the beginning.
Good sizing starts with what the building needs to hold. A structure that is barely large enough on day one may become frustrating once tools, shelves, trailers, workbenches, tractors, equipment, hay, feed or seasonal storage are added. Metal buildings in Texas should be sized with both current use and future storage needs in mind.
For metal garages in Texas, common sizes include 20×20, 24×24, 24×30, 30×40 and larger. A basic two-car garage may work for parking, but extra length is helpful for tools, storage or workspace. If the garage will hold trucks, trailers, UTVs, lawn equipment, ranch tools or a workbench area, a larger footprint may be more useful.
Door placement should match how the garage will be used. A garage for daily vehicles may only need one or two overhead doors. A shop may need a wider roll-up door, walk-in door, windows or side access for equipment. In hot areas, ventilation should be part of the layout from the beginning.
For metal carports in Texas, common sizes include 12×20, 18×20, 20×20, 20×30 and 24×30. A single-vehicle carport can be narrow, but extra width makes parking easier and leaves more room to open doors. Two-vehicle carports are often more comfortable when they are 20 to 24 feet wide.
If the carport will cover a trailer, tractor, boat, mower or small equipment, measure the tallest and widest item before choosing a size. It is better to leave extra room than to order a structure that feels tight every time it is used.
Metal barns in Texas often need more space than a basic garage. A small utility barn may start around 30×40, while larger equipment, hay, livestock or ranch buildings may need 40×60, 50×80 or more.
Door placement, clear height and access lanes are very important for barns. If tractors, trailers, hay wagons, cattle equipment, horse trailers, cotton equipment, sprayers or feed trucks need access, the building should be planned around the way those vehicles move. For livestock, hay or feed storage, airflow and shade should also be considered.
Metal RV covers in Texas should be taller and often longer than the RV itself. Extra length can help protect the hitch, rear ladder, spare tire or accessories. Extra width makes it easier to open doors and access compartments without feeling boxed in.
Because Texas can bring extreme heat, hail, heavy rain, sun and severe storms, RV owners often benefit from extra roof coverage beyond the exact length of the vehicle. A slightly larger RV cover can make the space easier to use and more protective.
Metal buildings in Texas need to be planned around several climate and site concerns. The most common issues are extreme heat, sun exposure, hail, damaging wind, tornadoes, hurricanes, flooding, drought, expansive clay soils, coastal corrosion and drainage.
Heat is one of the biggest everyday concerns for metal buildings in Texas. Enclosed buildings may trap heat if ventilation is not planned properly. This can be a concern for garages, barns, workshops, stored tools, feed, equipment, business inventory and animal areas.
Ventilation can help reduce trapped heat and condensation. Ridge vents, wall vents, cupolas, windows, large doors and proper airflow can make a building easier to use and better for stored items. If the building will be used as a shop, animal area or business space, insulation and interior planning may also be worth considering.
Texas can experience severe thunderstorms with damaging wind, hail and tornado-producing storm systems. NOAA’s Texas billion-dollar disaster summary shows severe storms are the most frequent billion-dollar disaster category affecting the state, followed by drought, tropical cyclones and other hazards.
A metal garage, carport or RV cover can help reduce direct hail exposure for vehicles, campers, tractors, tools and outdoor equipment. Panel gauge, roof profile, building placement and anchoring all matter. Even when hail causes cosmetic marks, covered storage can still protect the property underneath from more serious damage.
A metal building is not a tornado shelter. If a property needs life-safety protection during tornado warnings, that should be handled with a properly designed safe room, storm shelter or local emergency plan. The metal building itself should still be engineered and anchored for the local code requirements.
Texas Gulf Coast properties can be affected by tropical storms, hurricanes, storm surge, coastal wind and wind-driven rain. Coastal properties may also face salt air, humidity and corrosion concerns. Buildings near Houston, Galveston, Corpus Christi, Beaumont, Port Arthur, Brownsville or other coastal communities should be planned with wind exposure, corrosion-resistant materials and drainage in mind.
For metal buildings in Texas, wind exposure should be taken seriously. Proper anchoring, bracing and site-specific engineering can help the structure perform better during strong weather. Coastal sites, open rural properties, ranchland and large clearings may need extra attention because wind can hit the building with fewer natural windbreaks.
Drought is a major planning factor in many parts of Texas. Dry periods can affect forage, hay supply, livestock management, dust exposure and soil movement. Buildings used for ranch storage may need to protect hay, feed, equipment, tack and tools from both intense sun and sudden storm events.
Texas A&M AgriLife Extension notes that proper hay storage helps reduce losses from moisture and handling. The Texas A&M AgriLife hay storage guidance is a useful reference for ranchers and cattle operations planning covered storage. For metal building buyers, the practical takeaway is that hay, feed and equipment storage should be planned around airflow, drainage and easy access.
Flooding is an important planning concern for metal buildings in Texas. Heavy rain, hurricanes, tropical systems, flash floods, drainage ditches, creeks, low-lying land and river flooding can all affect where a building should be placed.
Before preparing a building site, check local floodplain rules and elevation requirements. The FEMA Flood Map Service Center can help property owners begin checking flood map information, but final requirements should be confirmed with the local county or municipality.
If a site is in a flood-prone area, the building pad, slab, elevation, drainage plan and access route may need additional review. In some cases, elevation certificates, floodplain permits, raised foundations or flood-resistant site planning may be required.
Many Texas properties include expansive clay soils that shrink when dry and swell when wet. That movement can affect slabs, foundations, driveways, posts and building pads if drainage is ignored. The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation notes that expansive soils with high moisture levels can heave, while low moisture levels can lead to settlement. The Texas expansive soil foundation guidance is a useful reference for understanding why soil moisture and foundation planning matter.
Before placing a metal building, look at how water moves across the property during heavy rain and how dry conditions affect the soil during drought. Avoid low areas where water collects. A compacted pad, gravel base, proper slope and clean runoff path can help protect the structure and make it easier to use year-round.
Foundation requirements can vary by local jurisdiction, flood zone, soil conditions, building size and use. A garage, barn, commercial building or structure with utilities may have different requirements than a small accessory structure.
Before pouring concrete or setting anchors, confirm local requirements for footings, slab thickness, elevation, reinforcement, drainage and inspections. This is especially important for larger metal buildings in Texas that will hold heavy vehicles, tractors, cattle equipment, cotton equipment, hay or commercial inventory.
Metal buildings in Texas are especially useful for agricultural and ranch storage. Texas farms and rural properties often need covered space for tractors, hay, feed, livestock supplies, cattle equipment, horse equipment, cotton equipment, trailers and maintenance tools.
Metal barns can provide wide, open storage areas for farm equipment and supplies. Larger buildings can be planned with tall doors, open bays, center aisles, lean-tos and clear-span layouts for easier equipment movement. A barn used for animals should include airflow planning, shade and enough room for daily work.
USDA/NASS reports Texas has major agricultural production in cattle, hay, cotton, wheat, corn and other commodities. The USDA/NASS Texas State Agriculture Overview is a useful reference for understanding why covered storage matters for farms and ranches across the state.
Cattle operations may need covered hay storage, equipment bays, shaded working areas and feed storage. Cotton operations may need tall doors and wide equipment access for tractors, sprayers, trailers and field implements. Hay operations need airflow, dry storage and easy access for loading and unloading. Ranch properties may also need mixed-use buildings that combine tool storage, tack storage, trailer parking and workshop space.
Metal carports can also be useful on farms and ranches when equipment needs overhead protection without a fully enclosed structure. For larger operations, commercial metal buildings can provide flexible space for shops, storage, business operations or farm support buildings.
Agricultural buildings should still be reviewed locally. A farm-use building, personal garage and commercial structure may each be treated differently depending on the county, city, flood zone, utility needs and building use.
Permit rules for metal buildings in Texas vary by county, city, flood zone, building size and intended use. Texas also has many unincorporated areas, but that does not mean every project is exempt from local review. Always check with the local building department, county engineer, floodplain administrator or development services office before ordering or placing a structure.
Harris County is a major planning area for metal buildings in Texas because of floodplain risk, Gulf Coast storm exposure, drainage concerns and rapid development. The Harris County Office of the County Engineer permits page is a useful starting point for unincorporated Harris County properties.
Harris County states that a permit is required for grading, building or renovating in a floodplain to ensure compliance with floodplain management regulations. Buyers should confirm whether the property is in unincorporated Harris County, inside Houston or inside another municipality. Floodplain review, site plans, engineer-stamped drawings, drainage, driveways, utilities and inspections may all affect the project.
Dallas County provides development permit guidance for unincorporated areas. The Dallas County development permit page states that development activities such as residential or non-residential construction, grading, filling, floodplain work and on-site sewage facility activity in unincorporated areas need a permit.
For metal buildings in Texas near Dallas, confirm whether the property is in unincorporated Dallas County or inside a city such as Dallas, Garland, Irving, Mesquite, Grand Prairie or another municipality. City rules may apply instead of county rules. Buyers should also account for North Texas expansive clay soils, drainage, driveway access, utilities and whether engineered drawings are required.
Travis County Development Services oversees guidelines, procedures and permits for development outside corporate city limits, including floodplain management, construction activity inspections and regulation of unincorporated areas. The Travis County Development Services page is a useful starting point for Austin-area properties outside city limits.
Travis County also provides an accessory building permit page for non-habitable buildings such as sheds or gazebos. If the property is inside Austin, Bee Cave, Lakeway, Pflugerville, Manor or another municipality, city rules may apply instead. Buyers should confirm development permits, accessory-building permits, driveway permits, septic permits, floodplain review and impervious cover rules before preparing the site.
Texas permit rules can change significantly from one county or city to another. A small shed, detached garage, RV cover, barn or commercial metal building may be reviewed differently depending on local code, flood zone, property size, utilities and intended use.
If the property is in an HOA, subdivision, floodplain, coastal zone, agricultural district, city limit or extraterritorial jurisdiction, additional rules may apply. Always confirm local requirements before ordering a building, preparing the site or pouring a slab.
Metal buildings in Texas can be used for garages, carports, barns, RV covers, workshops, agricultural storage, ranch storage, boat storage and commercial needs. The best choice depends on your location, weather exposure, building use, county requirements and site conditions.
A simple open carport may be enough for basic shade and vehicle coverage. A fully enclosed metal garage may be better for tools, vehicles and workspace. A larger metal barn can support ranch, farm and rural storage. A tall RV cover can help protect campers, motorhomes and boats. A commercial metal building can provide flexible space for business use.
Explore Blue Valley Steel building categories including metal garages, metal carports, metal barns, metal RV covers and commercial metal buildings to compare options for your Texas property.