Sorry, had trouble posting specs in original post, had to shorten the original question. Space is 38'x24' with 16' ceilings, 2x6 framing, 6" wall insulation, 14" in ceiling, a 9'x12' exterior deck out a glass slider on second level which has an office space. Double oak doors 6' wide X 7'6" tall open to a lower level shooting area with a bath/shower and separate kitchenette.
The design allows camera placement to make full use of either the 24' or 30' wide x16 tall wall. Building is separate from home.. so your commute is a 30' walk. As for what was photographed... every kind of furniture, products or setups up to 18' wide, you can hang a camera directly overhead for large rugs and carpets, the interior open space has a tested white paint to get perfect 5500K using Sppedotrons bounced off the walls or any combination of softboxes.
No, it won't take a car, but it will take anything two men and a dolly can lift. The upper level areas have two drafting tables, a 44" wide printer, two computer stations, two desks and a sitting area. What irked me is the appraiser said no more than 3 out of 10 home shoppers would even want a space/office/studio like this so he called it a barn and won't budge on his value. Perhaps I'm wrongly assuming anyone would want to have such a space for a hundred different reasons from movie theatre man cave, to mail order business, to an open space within which one could make anything.
What's frustrating is, and the recent corona virus pandemic has shown, there's a huge value in having a home office.