I went right back to the start of this thread. I was intrigued with the content. You have a great set up and yes it does look clean. Nice working space....
How about a garage with a couple of Allards? One has a Caddy overhead V8 and the other has an early Chrysler hemi. Wow!
When I designed my home I was told by the CCR board that I couldn't have a shop in my one acre yard. But they didn't say anything about garages! So I built two 3 car garages and one 2 car garage under the same roof as the house (technically garages, not outbuildings). I did draw it tastefully so it didn't look like I live in a mini storage.
She's small but we built the coupe in her from the ground up and my 56 is next. Have to be very efficient at tool placement and the use of space! One day I'll have a bigger shop AND a lift!
Building in progress. I decided that I need to define my space for sanity. One section is for my machining/fabrication, the other is for parking/repair. On the fabrication side, I put two I beams in the floor for a flat, level place to build/straighten things on. The repair section has a flush mount scissor lift/hoist. Above the repair section, is a storage loft. This should be enough to keep me comfortable for a while
Hello, Nice proportions of what is important… HA HA! Having lived and worked in different garages, in the late stages of satisfaction of the actual surroundings, a clean space is the key. Most garages are ok, but the shelves full of stuff makes me cringe. We used to have the same organization for our early garages, but at least our Willys build garage did not have stuff on shelves from floor to ceiling. But there was a time when open shelves worked and access was very handy, if you knew where everything was located. In time, the organization was as much a part of the whole concept of a great garages as plenty of parts or who had the most stuff that never gets used or dusted. Minimalism in open shelves is one thing and the massive amount of dust and crud floating around just needs a place to land. So, for our last adventure of our lives, our house is clean with minimal amount of stuff sitting around on shelves or out in the open. Our garage has great lighting for specific bench work and different lighting for intricate interior work in/on the cars. The walls are insulated with smooth white drywall coverings to withstand the cold winters and hot summers. We even got a new replacement door that is insulated to the max. Not only does it keep the whole area warm in the winter, but very cool in the hot summers. The thin metal folding door was just that, a thing metal that accentuated the heat. The exposed shelves are gone, replaced with everything inside of sliding drawers and tall cabinets with thick shelves that don’t bend in the middle. When someone sees the garage, it looks as if nothing takes place here. Where are the tools, the saws, the brooms, the extra parts ready for the next layer of dust? Jnaki I have to thank my wife for her organization ideas and insistence of a clean surface for a workspace. The counters and shelves are perfect. The drawers are organized in importance of use. A daily use drawer with simple things even my wife uses, is closest to the garage/house entry door. The larger tools and saws are in a deep drawer farther away from the house. Organization is the key and simplicity just adds value to your time in the garage. If I need to hit something hard or use a saw, there are blocks of wood and hard Lexan pieces to act as “hitting/sawing” surfaces. The counter is immaculate and the whole garage looks and actually is, a well insulated room for cars and other activities. An old, thick, kitchen Lexan-type cutting board is used for most protection during activity on the counter. The parts that used to be on shelves, well if we did not use them in the last two years, they got tossed, recycled or given away as fast as possible. The clutter is gone. It was replaced by clean surfaces and organization. There is an auto maintenance deep drawer for all things useful for car repair or maintenance if needed. As long as there is organization for the daily use items and they don't clutter up the whole drawer(s), then it flows well, even for my wife. On throwing things away, it takes a second to realize that you are never going to use it for any purpose, so why store it away? For us, a lesson learned, there are no regrets or thoughts of… “I know I can use it for another project, later…” bunch of ideas. YRMV
Will be moving to our property in the future..building shop (30'x52' 16' ceiling) first. Under construction, obviously.
Sheesh, tough following Moriarty.... Working on getting the new shed setup yet. Well, new is relative, 2 years on anyways. But at least I can get projects accomplished fairly easily now. Going to start knocking the 90's off this thing after Labor Day. Because I am done working on this new crap for now...
Cool stuff here, thanks for posting. Nothing I've had was ever good enough to be on the cover of any magazine so I hadda make up my own....
I know it's crazy and all but there's a whole entire sister forum called, get this, Garage Journal https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/ .