HPRifleman
Member Emeritus
The title is based on all the years that I've spent wanting to start this project.
Background
After 18 years of living on a small suburban lot with an impractical garage, in 2019 my wife and I bought a house in a very unique area of Chicagoland. Large lots, mature trees, and a small town feel. Most lots are also zoned for horses and there are lots of them around. Our house is a 2800 sq. ft. brick ranch that's perfect for a couple of middle-aged, soon-to-be empty nesters.
The Troubles Start…
Since we are on 4 acres I thought I had plenty of space to put up the garage that I always wanted. But the village has an ordinance that limits total garage space to no more than 20% of the dwelling space. Do that math on your own house and see what kind of garage that would get you.
To build the garage we had to apply for a zoning variance from the village. I won't derail this post by documenting that draining experience. But it took 6 months, several board meetings, attorney fees, high stress, and making a case for a garage to non-garage people before I finally prevailed. The whole process left me a bit bitter regarding over-regulating government bodies.
The village granted the variance but, to build the garage to the size I wanted, we had to convert our existing attached garage into living space. Sure, no problem. We just have to spend more of our money. Why should anyone at the village care about that?
The Project
My wife and I worked with an architect to design both spaces (garage and interior) so that we were happy with them. We chose to not finish the new garage interior as part of the current scope. That can be done later on as I better understand how I will use it.
My original thought was a simple rectangle with interior dimensions of 24' x 44'. My architect wanted a better looking front face so he added a bump out with gable that gave me 25' of depth in the middle of the space.
I wanted scissor trusses to provide more headroom and give the feel of a larger space. In-floor heat was also on the menu. I didn't know how much time I would spend out there in the winter, but I did know that I never want to stand around on a cold slab ever again. That in-floor heat also migrated into the refurbished existing garage as well.
Plan view of the new garage.

Front view of the new garage.

Side view of the new garage on the right with the old garage doors closed off in the background.

The new garage is going in that gap between the existing garage and the wood fence.

Background
After 18 years of living on a small suburban lot with an impractical garage, in 2019 my wife and I bought a house in a very unique area of Chicagoland. Large lots, mature trees, and a small town feel. Most lots are also zoned for horses and there are lots of them around. Our house is a 2800 sq. ft. brick ranch that's perfect for a couple of middle-aged, soon-to-be empty nesters.
The Troubles Start…
Since we are on 4 acres I thought I had plenty of space to put up the garage that I always wanted. But the village has an ordinance that limits total garage space to no more than 20% of the dwelling space. Do that math on your own house and see what kind of garage that would get you.
To build the garage we had to apply for a zoning variance from the village. I won't derail this post by documenting that draining experience. But it took 6 months, several board meetings, attorney fees, high stress, and making a case for a garage to non-garage people before I finally prevailed. The whole process left me a bit bitter regarding over-regulating government bodies.
The village granted the variance but, to build the garage to the size I wanted, we had to convert our existing attached garage into living space. Sure, no problem. We just have to spend more of our money. Why should anyone at the village care about that?
The Project
My wife and I worked with an architect to design both spaces (garage and interior) so that we were happy with them. We chose to not finish the new garage interior as part of the current scope. That can be done later on as I better understand how I will use it.
My original thought was a simple rectangle with interior dimensions of 24' x 44'. My architect wanted a better looking front face so he added a bump out with gable that gave me 25' of depth in the middle of the space.
I wanted scissor trusses to provide more headroom and give the feel of a larger space. In-floor heat was also on the menu. I didn't know how much time I would spend out there in the winter, but I did know that I never want to stand around on a cold slab ever again. That in-floor heat also migrated into the refurbished existing garage as well.
Plan view of the new garage.

Front view of the new garage.

Side view of the new garage on the right with the old garage doors closed off in the background.

The new garage is going in that gap between the existing garage and the wood fence.

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