HOW TO BUILD A BILLBOARD THE
CORRECT WAY
By
Frank Rolfe
There is a
right way and a wrong way to
build a billboard.
Unfortunately, the punishment
for not building the right way
can be crushing – from $10,000
to move the sign to total loss
of your investment if property
damage leads to expensive
litigation. Building a billboard
the correct way is essential to
prospering in the outdoor
billboard business.
The first step in building a
billboard is to gather all of
the relevant information
regarding billboard placement.
You need to know the front and
side setback regulations (both
city and state), the exact
dimensions of the structure
(from the blueprints), and
distance that the light fixtures
stick out from the catwalks –
everything that will determine
sign placement.
The next step is to map out,
with all this information in
hand, exactly where the
billboard column should go. When
the driller gets there to drill
the billboard foundation, the
only question he will ask you is
where the center of the column
will go. You need to map out,
well ahead of time and without
any pressure, where that center
should exactly be. One of the
best methods is to buy some
wooden stakes and a hammer, and
map out where all the corners of
the sign will be. This will help
you to visualize all of the
setbacks and their relation to
the real sign.
Once you have figured out
exactly where the center of the
column should go, give yourself
a break and increase the front
and side setback by an extra
foot or two. I learned this from
experience, since you never
really know 100% where the
property lines are. If there is
ever a dispute on the property
boundary, you will have to hire
a surveyor to find the exact
property line, and it may be a
foot or so different than where
you assumed it is. Even if the
property owner tells you with
great authority exactly where
their property begins, don’t
count on it. I once had a land
owner show me where the
easements and underground pipes
on his property were, and then I
dug down and hit an 18” water
main. The cost to move a
billboard is extremely high –
around $10,000 or so. However,
nobody will ever notice a 2’
additional setback. It’s a
simple case of risk vs. reward.
Before you start building the
sign make sure that you have
removed any obstruction to the
sign that it is within your
power to do. If you have
permission from the neighbor to
trim his tree, then trim it
before the sign goes in. It
always works best to do your
trimming and removing before the
sign calls a lot of attention to
what you are doing. You never
know what impact the actual sign
may have on the agreeable
neighbor – they may change their
mind when they see the huge size
of the sign they will be staring
out forever.
Now that you have a mastery of
the sign’s location, it’s time
to get ready for the steel to
arrive and the construction to
begin. Prior to the arrival of
the heavy equipment and some
huge pieces of steel, it is
important to obtain complete
permission and cooperation from
the landowner (and tenant) for
the dislocation that will occur
at his property on the day of
construction. You should also
make 100% that you have all of
the necessary permits and that
none have expired. Remember that
in some cities, you must
commence construction within so
many days of the permit
issuance, or it terminates. You
cannot take the risk of building
a sign that has no legal permit.
You should also scout out all of
the access issues – how will the
big trucks get in? Hopefully,
your sign erector has already
walked the site with you.
Once the sign erector and
foundation driller show up, you
should never leave the job site.
There are many problems that can
come up during construction, and
you need to be there to help
make the choices on how to
remedy them. The first potential
risk is the possibility of
hitting water or rock when
drilling the foundation. While
the driller should have a
solution ready in the event that
either should occur, you will
have to give on-the-spot
approval for the additional cost
to fix the problem. Other
reasons to stay on-site the
entire time is to help resolve
any problems with the property
owner or neighbors (noise
issues, etc.), and to make sure
that the exact location you
marked for the center of the
pole is utilized. I have been on
job sites where the driller
pulls out the stake and then
forgets exactly where it was.
Once the driller is at work, he
may get lazy and not drill quite
as deep as the plans recommend.
This compromises the safety of
the sign, as well as throwing
off your height limit. Make sure
and police that the hole is the
correct depth. Even a 6”
difference can be a huge
problem. Watch him measure the
depth, and make sure that he
does not cheat.
Once the pole is in the hole, it
is time to choose the “V” – the
angles of the sign faces in
relation to the traffic. This is
something you never want to
leave up to the installer. It’s
not their sign, they will not be
saddled with renting the ad
space, so they get lazy and
don’t do nearly as good as job
as you can do yourself. The
correct way to choose the “V”
angles is from the road it is
seen from. It sounds awkward,
but you have to normally spot
the angles from the middle of
the road or highway. I normally
use a cell phone to do this as
the sign installer cannot hear
you from 100 yards away.
When the pole is in the hole and
aligned, it is time for the
concrete truck. This is the
final step that requires your
presence. With the concrete,
your focus is to make sure that
they do not over-fill the hole,
or make a big mess on the
property. The concrete should
stop about 2” from ground level,
so that you can put dirt and
grass back over the hole. And
the biggest mess you can make on
the property is a bunch of
concrete dumped on the property.
Often, just your presence makes
the concrete guy more careful.
Once the concrete has been
poured, you no longer have to be
on-site through the end of the
construction process. However,
you still have some additional
duties to build a sign properly.
Make sure that the permit is
clearly affixed to the billboard
pole, so that the city inspector
knows you have one and that you
are following it. Also, take
some sort of thank-you gift to
the landowner or tenant to show
your appreciation for letting
you tear up their property for a
few days. It makes a great first
impression.
You should make a lot of money
with your first billboard. So it
is important that you do not
waste any money on having to fix
the setback, height, angle, and
visibility that you could have
easily prevented through
informed thinking and attention
to detail. Follow these
directions, and your billboard
should go smoothly and
successfully.
About the Author:
Frank Rolfe is the author
of the book...
Big Bucks From Big Signs and
is preparing for the first ever
OutdoorBillboard.com Bootcamp in October.
Rolfe started his
billboard empire from his coffee table, as a
fresh graduate from Stanford University. It
began as a resume builder for graduate school
applications, and ended with a sale to a public
company 14 years later.
Using unique strategies he developed from
desperate competition with much larger
adversaries, Rolfe eventually owned more
billboard units than any private individual in
Dallas/Ft. Worth. Along the way, he fine-tuned
the techniques to find billboard locations, rent
advertising space, and sell signs and leases.