cavalry
Well-known member
We first have to play a little catch-up as this has been an ongoing project. Lets rewind to last fall...
My "shop" was little more than a everyday residential parking garage. It was completely inadequate for my needs and I never wanted to really make improvements because it seemed easier to just put up a 40x60 steel building and have a more appropriate space to work with from the get go. I didn't want to put a barn on the same property as my house for fear of unreasonable reassessment so I was negotiating on a neighboring property. That fell though so I was forced to work with what I have.
It was compromised of the main section 24x24, 8' walls sitting on one row 8" block, but with a full upstairs via attic trusses. At some point the previous home owner put on an abortion of a 12x24 addition on the backside, but with a lower pitched truss roof. To say the shop was basic is an understatement. It had a 16 space 100A panel, no insulation or finished walls, some lighting, and was heated with a small woodstove. The overhead doors were too small for most of my vehicles and equipment which kind of defeats the purpose of having a shop when you are outside.
I needed bigger and taller to start with. I did some models and although its lower than I wanted I settled on 10'8" ceilings so it wouldn't look too "weird". My plan was to pour a 12x24 slab to the rear of the abortion addition, detach and slide back that addition, then raise the existing structure up 24" infill with block, then build to match the front section.
I might mention at this point that that this for the most part was a one man operation because I am a cheap ******* and don't like paying anyone for work I can do and most likely do better. Being this is a rural location and not really liking to deal with local goverment bureaucracy, I decided to take my chances and not procure a building permit.
First step was some sitework. I dug out the wash sand that was there and brought in about 30 yards of gravel, compacted, leveled and ready for forms.
My "shop" was little more than a everyday residential parking garage. It was completely inadequate for my needs and I never wanted to really make improvements because it seemed easier to just put up a 40x60 steel building and have a more appropriate space to work with from the get go. I didn't want to put a barn on the same property as my house for fear of unreasonable reassessment so I was negotiating on a neighboring property. That fell though so I was forced to work with what I have.
It was compromised of the main section 24x24, 8' walls sitting on one row 8" block, but with a full upstairs via attic trusses. At some point the previous home owner put on an abortion of a 12x24 addition on the backside, but with a lower pitched truss roof. To say the shop was basic is an understatement. It had a 16 space 100A panel, no insulation or finished walls, some lighting, and was heated with a small woodstove. The overhead doors were too small for most of my vehicles and equipment which kind of defeats the purpose of having a shop when you are outside.
I needed bigger and taller to start with. I did some models and although its lower than I wanted I settled on 10'8" ceilings so it wouldn't look too "weird". My plan was to pour a 12x24 slab to the rear of the abortion addition, detach and slide back that addition, then raise the existing structure up 24" infill with block, then build to match the front section.
I might mention at this point that that this for the most part was a one man operation because I am a cheap ******* and don't like paying anyone for work I can do and most likely do better. Being this is a rural location and not really liking to deal with local goverment bureaucracy, I decided to take my chances and not procure a building permit.
First step was some sitework. I dug out the wash sand that was there and brought in about 30 yards of gravel, compacted, leveled and ready for forms.
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I especially like how you didn't tell anyone here before you did all this. That's not sarcasm. If you had outlined your plans beforehand there would be 7 pages of debates about things - permits, saving the addition, raising the structure, etc.