Missouri is one of the top cattle-producing states in the nation, with millions of head grazing its pastures and thousands of operations managing beef and dairy cattle across the Ozarks and beyond. When those animals need housing — for winter protection, calving, confinement feeding, or working — the building they go into needs to be functional, durable, and designed around how livestock actually live and move.
Pre-engineered Red Iron steel livestock buildings from Missouri Metal Buildings give farmers and ranchers the clear-span interiors, ventilation options, and long-term durability that modern animal agriculture requires — without the rot, pest, and maintenance issues of wood-frame construction.
Get a Free Livestock Building Quote →In livestock buildings, proper ventilation isn't a comfort feature — it's an animal health requirement. Poor air quality in livestock facilities leads to respiratory disease, reduced feed conversion, heat stress, and elevated mortality, particularly in confined hog and poultry operations. In cattle buildings, the priority is exhausting heat, moisture, and ammonia while providing protection from rain, cold wind, and drafts.
The most effective and lowest-cost ventilation system for Missouri livestock buildings is natural ventilation: continuous ridge vents running the full length of the roof peak, combined with adjustable sidewall openings or drop curtains that can be closed in winter and opened in summer. This chimney effect pulls warm, moist, ammonia-laden air up and out through the ridge while drawing fresh air in at the eave level. Our buildings are engineered with proper ridge-vent-to-sidewall-opening ratios for effective passive air movement.
The industry standard is approximately 2 square feet of ridge vent opening per 10 feet of building width. A 60-foot-wide building therefore requires approximately 12 square feet of ridge vent cross-section per running foot of building length — a design target we engineer into every livestock structure.
Steeper roof pitches enhance natural ventilation by creating more attic volume for hot air to stratify before exhausting. A 4:12 pitch is the recommended minimum for enclosed livestock buildings. For large-span buildings or high-density operations, a 5:12 or 6:12 pitch may be justified. We engineer the pitch, ridge vent, and sidewall ventilation together as an integrated air management system — not as independent choices.
Beef cattle are typically housed in group pens at 20 to 30 square feet of floor space per animal for feedlot-type confinement, or in free-stall configurations for dairy. A clear-span steel building allows pen layouts to be configured freely, without columns interrupting alleys or pen boundaries. Common layouts include:
Working facilities — squeeze chutes, loading chutes, and sorting alleys — are often integrated into the endwall area or as a separate attached structure. We can design for these features in the original building layout.
Missouri cattle operations typically need dedicated calving areas — individual maternity pens of 12x16 feet are standard, with access to a heated room or warming box for neonatal calves during cold snaps. These areas are often in the most protected section of the barn with proximity to water and electrical outlets. We design livestock buildings with these special-use areas integrated rather than as an afterthought.
Most Missouri cattle buildings use a combination approach. Concrete is used in high-traffic alleys, feed lanes, and working areas where it resists wear and simplifies cleaning. Pen floors are often native clay or compacted earth, which is easier on hooves and legs and more comfortable for cattle lying down. Earthen floors require proper site grading to ensure drainage away from the building and manage manure accumulation effectively.
For intensive confinement operations — finishing cattle or wean-to-finish hog buildings — concrete slatted floors over below-floor manure pits are common in Missouri. These require careful structural design to support live loads from animals plus the dead load of accumulated manure. Our engineering team designs these systems to current structural standards.
Missouri livestock operations above certain head counts require Comprehensive Nutrient Management Plans (CNMPs) through USDA NRCS. Manure storage structures — lagoons, concrete pits, or stacking pads — are often constructed concurrent with livestock buildings and may be eligible for EQIP cost-share. We provide the stamped engineered drawings that NRCS requires for practice payment applications.
Ammonia from livestock urine is highly corrosive to unprotected metal. Over time, it attacks paint systems, accelerates rust on fasteners, and degrades structural members. Our livestock buildings address this through:
Small cow-calf operation. 30–50 head housing with calving area and equipment storage end.
Mid-size cattle facility. Double-row pens, central feed alley, 80–150 head capacity.
Large feedlot or backgrounding facility. Multiple pen rows, working area, feed storage.
Combination livestock + equipment storage. Common on diversified Missouri farms.
Beef cattle are the primary driver of livestock building construction in Missouri. They tolerate cold well but are sensitive to heat stress — ventilation design is critical for summer performance. Buildings should target maximum summer temperature inside the building within 5°F of outside temperature through ventilation alone.
Hog buildings require tighter environmental control than cattle facilities. Piglets are highly sensitive to cold — farrowing rooms must be maintained at 85–90°F for neonates — while finishing pigs need temperatures in the 65–75°F range. Slatted floor/pit systems are standard for intensive confinement. Hog buildings are more likely to require mechanical ventilation systems with zone temperature control.
Small ruminants are hardier than cattle in many respects but more susceptible to respiratory disease from drafts and poor ventilation. Sheep buildings should protect from wind and precipitation while maintaining excellent air quality. Predator exclusion — solid walls and secure doors — is a higher priority for sheep operations than for cattle. Buildings in the 30-to-50-foot width range are typical for sheep operations.
Design Your Livestock Building →Also see: Equipment Storage Buildings if you need a combination farm building for both equipment and livestock, or Agricultural Metal Buildings for a broader look at farm building options.
Missouri livestock producers trust Red Iron steel for barns that last decades without the rot, pest, and fire risks of wood. Tell us your operation size, species, and site, and we'll design a building that works for your animals and your management system.
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