“Sleek” is a good word to describe Erik Dean’s
new cold storage building in Hector, MN. With its clean lines and brown
accents, its exterior LED lights and large Schweiss Doors bifold liftstrap autolatch door finished with decorative windows, the structure offers great farm site appeal.
Dean
is a part of a new generation of GPS-knowledgeable farmers across the
country. He dedicated himself to this career path following college and a
stint in Iraq with the Army National Guard. At that time, he farmed
with his dad, Gary, until his dad retired a couple of years later. He
runs the farm now with help from his cousin, Terry Dean, his dad and a
neighbor, Jim Roebke. The Renville County farm produces mostly corn and
soybeans, with some sweet corn and peas.
Dean's new machine shed measures 80' x 108' and features a 48' x 20' bifold liftstrap door from Schweiss Doors. The door
is equipped with autolatches and has three windows measuring 48-1/4
inches by 42-1/4 inches, allowing natural daylight to brighten up the
building which has no windows on the west wall.
“My
neighbor, Kurt Sandgren, and I are on the township board together,”
Dean says. “He has Schweiss doors and encouraged me to talk to Mike
Schweiss when I was looking for a door. Mike took me all around and
talked about the hydraulic doors and pointed out the benefits of the
bifold door; being able to park right in front of them and the advantage
of being able to open it even if there was a lot of snow. Most of the
farmers around here have bifold doors. Country Wide Lumber in Hector did
my building and they also told me they liked working with Schweiss
Doors.”
Dean
said he really appreciates the width and height of the door, which
makes it easy to move his machinery in and out, and the fact the door seals well. He confesses to being amazed at the engineering that went into the door.
“Everybody
told me that when they built their building, they wished they would
have put in a bigger and taller door,” Dean says. “I was even debating
about putting in a 22-foot-tall door, but I’m happy with the 20-foot
door. The Morton shed, built in the 80s, was where we used to store the
combine. It was only 16-feet and we would have to collapse everything
down on the combine to get it in. Now we just drive it in.”
He
said he didn’t even consider a cable lift bifold door; he likes the
straps. He chose the autolatch door system because he heard from others
that you never have to remember to unlatch or latch the door. Schweiss
completed the install and had it up and running in less than a day.
Dean
also has two rollup doors on the building for additional easy access to
the building for smaller equipment. Those doors are 16 and 24 feet
tall.
“My
neighbors have all come up and checked out my Schweiss door,” Dean
says. “I’ve got some relatives in the Twin Cities that have come and
seen it and they were pretty amazed at it, too.”