The 14'×20' shed seems sturdy enough and looks good but the installation was trash!
My client hired me to install skirting between the bottom of the shed and the ground. I was going to re-level the shed as there was about 2 inches of sagging from the middle of the 20' span to the gable ends.
The shed was placed on a slope so concrete blocks were placed under the corners on the downslope. The other side was resting on the ground . There was no crushed stone base, as there should be, under the blocks and they were made level initially by shimming with a piece of 3/4" zip style sheathing underneath one side ( not rated for ground contact ).
An employee ( from reading other reviews, I have surmised it was the owner ) showed up today to re-level the shed as was guaranteed by the company. That would be great except for the inadequate site prep. Not their domain, I guess, but I would think if you're going to sell a shed that big to someone, you would either prepare the site or instruct the buyer to do so. When I questioned the employee ( owner ), Mike, about the wood sill contacting the ground, his reply was that it was pressure treated. I protested to his reply and he said, "I guess you've got it all figured out!" I replied, "Yes, I do." He then stormed off, got in his truck and started to leave. It's not my shed, mind you. The homeowner talked to him and got him to come back and jack it up and put blocks underneath so we could dig and put proper footings of crushed stone underneath the blocks. Pressure treated will last a lot longer than conventional lumber but it will rot. Case in point, earlier in the day I had to remove some OSB sheathing from around the garage door that had rotted and the studs behind were resting on a bottom plate of pine with a pressure treated sill under that. The outside portion of the pressure treated sill was soft enough that I could push the corner of my putty knife in a quarter inch. So much for pressure treated lumber being impervious to moisture.
The homeowner also requested that the blocks be moved to be flush with the sill so I could install the skirting properly. Mike said it was not possible because the shed would be resting on the outside of the block and would cause it to tip. I simply added a piece of 2×6 beside the 2×4 sill piece ( inadequate as far as I'm concerned ) so the entire block had something above it to prevent it from resting only on the outside of the block. Worked like a charm and needless to say, Mike will not have to come back to perform a half-assed leveling job that will result in a non-level shed in time.
If you buy a shed from them, don't count on them doing any site work. Other than that, the shed seems to be well built, for a shed, and it looks good.
Update 7/2/25: I checked on the shed and it is still level.