sp00led
Member
So I had some money burning a hole in my pocket from the RHD Integra Type-R I sold a year ago. I lost use of my rear patio because it became storage for a riding mower, honda foreman, and yamaha raptor. I really wanted to buy a new project car with the money but I've already got two trailers and a truck outside my house. Bottom line, I'm in need of storage in a serious way.
And so the dream began.... Detached Garage with two post lift!
I started with plans of a 1008sq ft (almost 2/3 size of my house...) 32'x28' three bay garage. Well the day before I started digging my farmer neighbor informed me that I was led astray by the realator. I don't own the 15' wide section of land between my driveway and his cattle fence. Back to the drawing boards...
I downsized to a modest 25'x32' (800sq ft) garage. I lost a bay but nothing else would fit without having a garage behind my house and that wasn't an option with my .4 acre layout.
The plan is to have 2x6 12' walls for lift clearance. I'm going to have a row of block layed on top of the slab so I can wash it out. Slab has 2-3" slope from rear to front for drainage. The front will have a 18' residential garage door. One 3/0 side entry door and one rear door. No windows (security). I'm going to brick everything except the rear wall. Saves money, isn't visable, and leaves room for additions later. Gable roof on a 6/12 pitch with brick on the front gable to match my house.
My budget is $15,000. I figured I would start this thread to document the process and share my attempt at staying on budget.
Running total on $ spent:
$1300 - Labor (outsourced) - Dig footer, tie rebar, pour footer, prep, pour, and finish slab
$214 - Rebar, anchor bolts, 6 mil plastic
$604 - 7 yards concrete for footer
$62 - rebar stakes, plumbing and electrical conduit
$800 - 50 tons of 6/7s gravel. I did have about 15-20 tons leftover I gave to my father for his driveway.
$275 - Sand/mortar
$350 - Labor for block masons
$265 - 8x8x16 Cinder block
$125 - Wire mesh
Here is a picture of the existing wooden fence that was removed. Couple taps from a hammer and I had it apart in sections.
This is after the footer was dug, rebar laid, electrical conduit and plumbing drain/supply installed, and two 12" deep, 3' long trenchs dug. I've got some serious sweat equity in those ditches!
The footer was poured yesterday. It took 7 yards of concrete. I got lucky and got to place the order with Alabama Concrete through a company (wholesale). Saved me $9 per yard. Rain delay today and probably this whole week... I'll get some more pics up before the block mason arrives to do his thing.
Here the footer was poured. You can see where he made the step downs.
I didn't get any block only pics. Here you can see the block laid, gravel spread, plastic and mesh laid. Notice you don't see the electrical and plumbing pipes anymore. We discretely placed them inside the cinder blocks covered in morter. We filled in matching cells on each side filled with rebar to "reinforce" the slab *cough*. Permits aren't cheap
Here are a few pics of the slab the day after it was poured.
Day1 of framing we got the walls up. No guns, all hand nailed!
Day2 and much better conditions. Humidity was gone and we got everything except the front wall covered. Working off a extension ladder makes 4x8 OSB get old quick!
And so the dream began.... Detached Garage with two post lift!
I started with plans of a 1008sq ft (almost 2/3 size of my house...) 32'x28' three bay garage. Well the day before I started digging my farmer neighbor informed me that I was led astray by the realator. I don't own the 15' wide section of land between my driveway and his cattle fence. Back to the drawing boards...
I downsized to a modest 25'x32' (800sq ft) garage. I lost a bay but nothing else would fit without having a garage behind my house and that wasn't an option with my .4 acre layout.
The plan is to have 2x6 12' walls for lift clearance. I'm going to have a row of block layed on top of the slab so I can wash it out. Slab has 2-3" slope from rear to front for drainage. The front will have a 18' residential garage door. One 3/0 side entry door and one rear door. No windows (security). I'm going to brick everything except the rear wall. Saves money, isn't visable, and leaves room for additions later. Gable roof on a 6/12 pitch with brick on the front gable to match my house.
My budget is $15,000. I figured I would start this thread to document the process and share my attempt at staying on budget.
Running total on $ spent:
$1300 - Labor (outsourced) - Dig footer, tie rebar, pour footer, prep, pour, and finish slab
$214 - Rebar, anchor bolts, 6 mil plastic
$604 - 7 yards concrete for footer
$62 - rebar stakes, plumbing and electrical conduit
$800 - 50 tons of 6/7s gravel. I did have about 15-20 tons leftover I gave to my father for his driveway.
$275 - Sand/mortar
$350 - Labor for block masons
$265 - 8x8x16 Cinder block
$125 - Wire mesh
Here is a picture of the existing wooden fence that was removed. Couple taps from a hammer and I had it apart in sections.
This is after the footer was dug, rebar laid, electrical conduit and plumbing drain/supply installed, and two 12" deep, 3' long trenchs dug. I've got some serious sweat equity in those ditches!
The footer was poured yesterday. It took 7 yards of concrete. I got lucky and got to place the order with Alabama Concrete through a company (wholesale). Saved me $9 per yard. Rain delay today and probably this whole week... I'll get some more pics up before the block mason arrives to do his thing.
Here the footer was poured. You can see where he made the step downs.
I didn't get any block only pics. Here you can see the block laid, gravel spread, plastic and mesh laid. Notice you don't see the electrical and plumbing pipes anymore. We discretely placed them inside the cinder blocks covered in morter. We filled in matching cells on each side filled with rebar to "reinforce" the slab *cough*. Permits aren't cheap
Here are a few pics of the slab the day after it was poured.
Day1 of framing we got the walls up. No guns, all hand nailed!
Day2 and much better conditions. Humidity was gone and we got everything except the front wall covered. Working off a extension ladder makes 4x8 OSB get old quick!
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