Login Register Sign up for the GRM e-newsletter

Login to post Forums » Grassroots Motorsports » Please Enlighten Me About Your Detatched Garage/Shop... « 1 2 3 »
  • joey48442

    Feb. 10, 2012 1:41 p.m. joey48442 SuperDork

    My father had siding put on a pole barn, and makes it look just like the house. Made the township happy, as it had to appear the same as the house.

    Joey

  • 4cylndrfury

    Feb. 10, 2012 2:08 p.m. 4cylndrfury SuperDork

    joey48442 wrote:

    My father had siding put on a pole barn, and makes it look just like the house. Made the township happy, as it had to appear the same as the house.

    Joey

    I rather like this idea...hmmmm - can a pole barn have an "Upstairs"/Attic?

  • 44Dwarf

    Feb. 10, 2012 2:17 p.m. 44Dwarf Dork

    If you do in floor heat make sure to have a DETAILED map of where the tubes are so when you do put in the lift you don't spring a leak!!

  • Cotton

    Feb. 10, 2012 3:11 p.m. Cotton Dork

    you can't have enough garage doors. My shop is 32x60 with only three garage doors and it isn't enough. It can be a real pain getting a car out depending on where it's positioned. My next shop will hopefully be close to twice the size with garage doors all along each side...that would be my dream shop anyway.

  • oldeskewltoy

    Feb. 10, 2012 6:48 p.m. oldeskewltoy HalfDork

    Man a new shop WOULD be nice....

  • poopshovel

    Feb. 10, 2012 7:16 p.m. poopshovel SuperDork

    I like floor drains. It's the only thing I really wish I would've done in our garage (basement.) As of right now, you have to piss out the window. No fun in winter. And berkeley another bathroom to clean.

  • bravenrace

    Feb. 11, 2012 8:52 a.m. bravenrace SuperDork

    In reply to joey48442:

    If you look at the pics of mine on the last page, that's what mine is. HOwever, if you plan on insluating and drywalling it, at least in my case, it would have been cheaper to build a stick frame structure.

  • bravenrace

    Feb. 11, 2012 8:54 a.m. bravenrace SuperDork

    poopshovel wrote:

    I like floor drains. It's the only thing I really wish I would've done in our garage (basement.) As of right now, you have to piss out the window. No fun in winter. And berkeley another bathroom to clean.

    I didn't put drains in mine except for the sink and toilet. My plan was to slope the floor very slightly towards the doors and then have a trough drain just outside. I wanted a pretty flat floor. I probably went a little too flat, as it really doesn't drain well. If I did it again, I'd still do it the same way, but I'd put a little more slope in it.

  • Ian F

    Feb. 11, 2012 9:36 a.m. Ian F SuperDork

    Floor drains in a garage are often against code. Again, check before going too far.

  • NOHOME

    Feb. 11, 2012 11:34 a.m. NOHOME HalfDork

    Also, keep in mind that whatever you do to bypass codes can and will come back to bite you if and when you sell the place.

  • SkinnyG

    Feb. 11, 2012 11:49 a.m. SkinnyG HalfDork

    poopshovel wrote:

    I like floor drains. It's the only thing I really wish I would've done in our garage (basement.) As of right now, you have to piss out the window. No fun in winter. And berkeley another bathroom to clean.

    Don't drywall the bathroom - panel it so you can clean the whole thing with a pressurewasher. Seriously, it takes no time at all.

  • 914Driver

    Feb. 11, 2012 3:39 p.m. 914Driver SuperDork

    24 X 42 only because the City Fathers wouldn't let me cover more of my foot print with building. It has 11 ft. ceilings. Storage above is 13 ft. wide X 8 ft. high X 42 ft. deep, they're called Storage Trusses.

    I contracted someone to do the footing, block and center slab, I did everything else.

    In the center are stairs that access the attic, but next to that is a trap door looking thing that flips open and has a small block & tackle to hoist up snow tires etc. and a chain fall to yank engines or pull the body off a car.

    Heat is propane.

    There's an add-on out back so SWMBO has a place to play with plants and dirt, keeps the garage cleaner.

    Garage sale 6 speaker stereo, college dorm refrigerator and I'll see you in the spring.

    Dan

  • wheelsmithy

    Feb. 12, 2012 10:40 a.m. wheelsmithy Reader

    I'm in the process of building a 30X34 shop. 12/12 pitch attic trusses, hardiboard cladding. I'm doing an I beam out the front top with a trolley, and chainfall to get stuff up to attic/lounge. also, an "attic fan" in the stall that will have the lift, and double as the paint booth when the plastic on the 2X4 is rolled down(I hope that makes some kind of sense.) Ladder to the upstairs to conserve floorspace. Air hocket upstairs, maybe multiple dorm fridges. party.

  • icaneat50eggs

    Feb. 12, 2012 11:34 a.m. icaneat50eggs New Reader

    on the floor drain, unless you are putting in a grease seperator, your city shouldn't allow it if you are draining into a public system. If you have a septic system you can do it, but you may cause problems for yourself.

  • PDoane

    Feb. 13, 2012 8:41 a.m. PDoane New Reader

    darkbuddha had the best comment so far

    "the spaces (clean room, dirty room, storage, etc.) "

    Especially keeping the "dirty" room (grinding, sanding, welding, painting) separate.

  • 4cylndrfury

    Feb. 14, 2012 7:27 a.m. 4cylndrfury SuperDork

    Dan, that sounds exactly like what Im looking for.

    To all, thanks for your input. I think Im going to have to sign up over on Garage Journal after reading all 92 pages of the 12 gauge garage, and several of the other threads linked therein.

    So, with that all said, what is your favorite design element of your garage? A fancy block and tackle for hoisting things? Creative storage solution? Grassroots HVAC? Please give me the nugget of greatness that your garage has to brag about...so I can shamelessly steal it

« 1 2 3 »  
Tire Rack- Revolutionizing Tire Buying

You'll need to log in to post.