Before You Build
Before a livestock barn is built or expanded in Lambton County, the first step is not concrete, posts, or trusses. The first step is determining whether the proposed project can meet Ontario nutrient management and land use requirements.
Lambton County combines a strong livestock base — dairy, beef, swine, and poultry — with cash cropping and specialty production. Plympton-Wyoming, Brooke-Alvinston, Warwick, Enniskillen, and the surrounding townships each have their own pattern of livestock densities, neighbouring residences, and source water considerations that affect where a new or expanded barn can realistically be sited.
Farmers should confirm:
Whether the project triggers a Nutrient Management Strategy
Whether a Nutrient Management Plan is also required
Whether the site works under MDS I or MDS II
Whether manure storage is adequate
Whether the land base can support the nutrients generated
Whether the project creates setback issues with neighbours, roads, lot lines, or sensitive land uses
Step-by-Step Barn Building Process
Step 1: Define the project
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New barn or expansion
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Livestock type
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Final livestock capacity
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Housing system
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Manure type
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Storage method
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Proposed location
Step 2: Calculate nutrient units
Nutrient units are one of the first screening tools for determining whether a project may trigger NMS or NMP requirements.
Step 3: Review NMS/NMP requirements
If the farm is building or expanding livestock, an NMS is commonly required. Larger operations may also require an NMP depending on nutrient units and land application requirements.
Step 4: Check MDS and setbacks
Minimum Distance Separation is often one of the biggest constraints on barn siting. MDS can affect whether the proposed barn location works before design or construction begins.
Step 5: Review manure storage
Storage must be appropriate for the livestock system, manure type, and regulatory requirements. Liquid manure, solid manure, permanent storage, and temporary field storage all have different management concerns.
Step 6: Prepare supporting documentation
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Farm sketch
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Barn location
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Livestock numbers
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Manure storage details
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Land base
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Crop rotation
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Soil tests if needed
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MDS information
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NMS/NMP information if triggered
Step 7: Submit for approvals
Municipal approvals, building permits, nutrient management approvals, and supporting documentation may all need to align before the project proceeds.
Common Delays in Lambton County
Waiting too long to calculate nutrient units
Choosing a barn site before checking MDS
Underestimating manure storage needs
Missing land base information
Not knowing whether NMS or NMP is required
Assuming the municipality will sort out nutrient management later
Not starting the regulatory process early enough
Why Local Knowledge Matters
Barn projects in Lambton County need to satisfy provincial nutrient management rules, but the farm context is local.
In Lambton County, MDS calculations and source water protection considerations near the St. Clair and Sydenham watersheds often shape barn siting more than the building footprint itself. Confirming nutrient units, manure storage strategy, and MDS II setbacks early is the difference between a smooth approval and a re-design.
How LandLogic Helps
Nutrient unit calculations
NMS and NMP preparation
MDS review
Manure storage planning
Farm visit
Documentation support
Approval guidance
Need help walking through this in Chatham-Kent? Contact us or learn about our nutrient management consulting in Ontario.
Planning a Barn Project in Lambton County?
Before you finalize a barn site or submit a permit package, confirm the nutrient management and setback requirements.

Can I Build a Barn Here?
Check whether a proposed barn location may be constrained by MDS, setbacks, or nearby land uses.

Use the Advanced MDS Calculator
Estimate detailed MDS-related setback planning for livestock barns and manure storage.

Calculate Nutrient Units
Estimate livestock nutrient units to help determine whether NMS or NMP requirements may be triggered.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need an NMS to build a barn in Ontario?
What are nutrient units and how does this relate to livestock?
When do I need both an NMS and an NMP?
How long does approval of a NMS or NMP take?
