LoRollinLS
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2006
- Messages
- 211
Tell her that the garage thinks that she is too big.
Gentleman, I fear we have all missed the most important factor in this discussion...
How hot is said fiancée???
I have read all the relationship issues and there are none here. All she said I don't care how big you make the garage it just has to look good from the outside. That is why I was asking about a rendering, a member has offered to draw one for me, and I have found a style she really likes, and I can make it 36 X 40. The other advantage is, there is a water problem that the water from the street runs into the cellar one car garage. By building the garage on that side of the house and changing the driveway (corner lot) to the other street, stops all the water problems. We are old enough to know what we want and actually talk, discuss and compromise to stay happy. In all honesty I could not have found a better best friend and future wife. I am posting some pictures so you can decide if she is hot.
Here is my story, I had a 24 x 26 and a 30 x 30 garage at my house in Maine. I sold my house and moved in with my future wife in southern New Hampshire. Our plan was to find a house with a big garage or land enough to build one. Everything we looked at was still priced way too high. So I decided to see how big of a garage I could build onto her house. The lot is grandfathered and I can build a 36 x 40 garage and meet all zoning codes. Now she is having second thoughts about the garage being too big? I didn't know you could build a garage too big? I have taken some pictures of garage styles and found one she likes but I think if I could find someone who could do a rendering of her house with the garage so she could see it would look ok. Any thoughts, comments or ideas?
Thanks
Mike
Given the stakes, maybe consulting with a professional is the best course for the OP+1? Assuming you find the right architect, it would be good money spent, IMO. The best money I ever spent was hiring a consulting forester to manage my timber sale instead of trying to do it myself.An architect can do exactly what you are looking for, but they get expensive quick.
See her answer here.Q: I’m currently remodeling my 1960s single-story ranch home. My question is whether you think it’s possible to add an attached garage (with living space above) without dwarfing the original box-type ranch? I believe that I’m constrained by the original 6/12 pitch of my ranch and the height needed for living space above the garage.
I have read all the relationship issues and there are none here. All she said I don't care how big you make the garage it just has to look good from the outside. That is why I was asking about a rendering, a member has offered to draw one for me, and I have found a style she really likes, and I can make it 36 X 40. The other advantage is, there is a water problem that the water from the street runs into the cellar one car garage. By building the garage on that side of the house and changing the driveway (corner lot) to the other street, stops all the water problems. We are old enough to know what we want and actually talk, discuss and compromise to stay happy. In all honesty I could not have found a better best friend and future wife. I am posting some pictures so you can decide if she is hot.
As a professionally trained Architect, I can tell you that your probably going to waste your money on one. (I have a 5 year degree in Architecture, but I never practiced because it pays ****.)
I would tell you that you will be running up against the whole idea that its "HER" house. She is going to have problems thinking of it as your house too. The longer she has lived there, the stronger the feelings.
I ran into this with my wife after we got married. She never really felt that my place was ours.
I told her to go find a house she liked, that we could afford, and that had at least a 3 car garage.
She found it, I bought it, and we couldn't be happier, but now I need a bigger garage.
You have to think of marriage as a partnership. Women are emotional and rationally idiots, so just make sure that she feels like she is part of the decisions.
I tell my wife everything. She never listens, but that's her fault and not mine.
I have read all the relationship issues and there are none here. All she said I don't care how big you make the garage it just has to look good from the outside. That is why I was asking about a rendering, a member has offered to draw one for me, and I have found a style she really likes, and I can make it 36 X 40. The other advantage is, there is a water problem that the water from the street runs into the cellar one car garage. By building the garage on that side of the house and changing the driveway (corner lot) to the other street, stops all the water problems. We are old enough to know what we want and actually talk, discuss and compromise to stay happy. In all honesty I could not have found a better best friend and future wife. I am posting some pictures so you can decide if she is hot.



Depends on his aim....................You'll miss her..
Was I the only one who thought OP was a sub-30 year old with this type of problem!

... We are quite happy in the house and no "mine/yours" issues. However that may be because she had some input. ...
A garage too big??? There is no such thing!![]()
by by fiance!
that is the key. it cannot be your garage and her house. It must become "our" house and become "our garage".What des she need in order to "buy into" the garage idea? Looks like a carriage house? Has a really big "her" closet? includes a pantry, and a luxo bath with bidet. My wife's closet is bigger than the house where I was born. She will never relocate; what would she do with her decorator upholstered closet settee.
now to make her house your house too; you get an 80" HDTV in the house, with awsome surround sound.

Register here...
http://www.yellowbullet.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=11
and ask the guys there..
They will definitely tell you how to handle this situation.
I appreciate all the advice, She will accept any size garage as long as it looks good from the outside. I should have been clearer what I needed. I have found garage styles and facades that she likes. I just need a rendering so I can show her what I picture it to look like attached to our house. She has said she just can't visualize what it will look like. I read all the relationship advice and this is the second for both of us. I am in the twilight of my years so longevity isn't an issue. My only son lives 1000 miles away so that isn't a problem. The only issue is finding someway for her to visualize what it will look like.
Thanks
This ^^^^^^^^^^^ is why I left.. East Tennessee is heaven on earth and I wish I had moved here 20 years ago instead of ******* away several thousand bucks paying property taxes to support a town that dosn't give a rats *** about the families who have lived there for generations. I was born in NH and lived in the same house up there for 32 years until 2 years ago. NH can KMA... Flatlanders moved there to "get away" from the city bs but forgot to leave their city attitudes at home. If you're a Maine native you'll learn to hate it too.. All the best. You'll need it.Southern NH is a Boston Suburb
good luck
I forgot about this thread! I have almost all the outside done, I will update with a new photo this weekend. Here is the buiild thread:
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=191173
I MUST be the lucky one, my girl knows and insists I build my shop as big as I can within reason. So in the area we are lookin I should be able to squeeze in a 24 or 26 wide on the lot, pushed up against the one side as close as I can to code for the property line then leave 30"-36"wide from property line to garage for access to the back lane. She gets one spot to park her minivan and whatever I workin on gets the other side. NO garden tools etc in there, thats what the under deck shed is for.
This ^^^^^^^^^^^ is why I left.. East Tennessee is heaven on earth and I wish I had moved here 20 years ago instead of ******* away several thousand bucks paying property taxes to support a town that dosn't give a rats *** about the families who have lived there for generations. I was born in NH and lived in the same house up there for 32 years until 2 years ago. NH can KMA... Flatlanders moved there to "get away" from the city bs but forgot to leave their city attitudes at home. If you're a Maine native you'll learn to hate it too.. All the best. You'll need it.
Time to look for a new fiance......once you compromise on the garage.........it will all be downhill.........LOL
