rodsnratfinks
Well-known member
Short story: My wife and I bought a modestly sized 53 ranch home with an attached 21' x 16' 2 car garage in early spring of last year. All of my tools and shop equipment along with my other belongings had been in a 10x10 storage for the three years prior. Coming from a 3/2 with 30' x 25' detached shop, I made many sacrifices to be where I am today, and I kept only the essentials. No 50 ton press, no 5 ton cherry picker, or table saw. Most of my tools were in cardboard boxes for that whole time since I sold my rollaways to conserve space. /story
Well, the first year of homeownership took a lot of my time, but from about the first of the year, I've been busy (time and weather permitting) getting my garage cleaned up so I can have a shop. Here's what it looks like right now:


My goals for it are pretty simple/complex (simple in theory, complex in execution):
- A flexible and modular shop environment where I do home repairs, electronics, automotive repair and hot rodding, musical instrument restoration, bicycle building, furniture restoration, mild woodworking/furniture building, mild fab work, general tinkering.
- Clean! Little to no clutter.
- I want to be able to park two cars in the garage. One of the stalls will be my wife's designated space, the other will be mine and will be flexible: I can park my car in there, or if I'm working on a big project, it can occupy the stall. The workplace stall will have a fold out bench and other movable shop furniture.
- The work bench will be modular. I plan on 12- 15 foot bench hinged in the middle that will pivot out from the wall giving me a ~7' x 4' island.
- Multiple instances of nesting, convertible, and stow-away storage for effective space utilization.
- Nothing kept in the shop that doesn't need to be kept there.
- Hoping to confine all hand tools and most other types of tools to the tool box, making it a kind of one stop shop.
- As often as possible, use repuposed, used, and found supplies for shop fixtures to keep costs down for a high WAF and thriftiness factor. Besides, the less I spend on shop fixtures, the more I can spend on my projects.
More to come.
Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk
Well, the first year of homeownership took a lot of my time, but from about the first of the year, I've been busy (time and weather permitting) getting my garage cleaned up so I can have a shop. Here's what it looks like right now:



My goals for it are pretty simple/complex (simple in theory, complex in execution):
- A flexible and modular shop environment where I do home repairs, electronics, automotive repair and hot rodding, musical instrument restoration, bicycle building, furniture restoration, mild woodworking/furniture building, mild fab work, general tinkering.
- Clean! Little to no clutter.
- I want to be able to park two cars in the garage. One of the stalls will be my wife's designated space, the other will be mine and will be flexible: I can park my car in there, or if I'm working on a big project, it can occupy the stall. The workplace stall will have a fold out bench and other movable shop furniture.
- The work bench will be modular. I plan on 12- 15 foot bench hinged in the middle that will pivot out from the wall giving me a ~7' x 4' island.
- Multiple instances of nesting, convertible, and stow-away storage for effective space utilization.
- Nothing kept in the shop that doesn't need to be kept there.
- Hoping to confine all hand tools and most other types of tools to the tool box, making it a kind of one stop shop.
- As often as possible, use repuposed, used, and found supplies for shop fixtures to keep costs down for a high WAF and thriftiness factor. Besides, the less I spend on shop fixtures, the more I can spend on my projects.
More to come.
Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk
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