Hey guys.
Long time lerker and very infrequent poster here. I've been using this forum for years to mentally design my dream garage and I am finally able to start that project. I am calling this the Mary Kay Garage for reasons that I will make clear in a subsequent post.
Mine will not be a huge garage however as I live in the City of Chicago and my project has to fit on a standard size Chicago lot of 25 feet in width and 125 feet in length. The new garage will be a brick garage roughly 23 feet wide and 20 feet deep with a bump out making half the garage 4 feet deeper. The garage will also have a roof deck on top. Space is such a premium in the city that we want to get all the outdoor space that we can. The garage will replace a smaller wooden structure that is probably structurally sound but that definitely has some cosmetic issues. The drawing below will show the layout of the garage on our lot and its relation to our 125 year old two story graystone house.
I'll explain some of our parameters which lead to the design above.
Garage needs to fit on our city sized 25 by 125 lot. This should be pretty obvious. While I very definitely enjoy city living (we live in the Lakeview neighborhood near Wrigley Field in Chicago) being a car guy in the city involves compromises - the biggest of which is that space is very expensive. Basically I am building the biggest garage I can while still leaving space in our lot for the house and a small yard.
Garage needs to accommodate at least one project car and the tools to work on it. Its going to be tight but I am planning on putting a workbench, some storage, the typical mechanical tools, some sort of welding table and a two post lift in the space.
Garage also needs to be able to park one daily driver. My wife and I have two dailies and I really wish we could fit both of them but a three car garage is just not going to fit. That said we need to still park one of our cars on a nightly basis. Our neighborhood gets pretty crowded especially when there are Cubs games or on Friday or Saturday nights when people come in to the city to have dinner or go to bars. Most of the time its easy enough to park on the street in front of our house but we want to have at least one space in the garage so that if we are out for dinner on a Friday night that we have a place to park without the hassle of looking for a spot when the streets are crowded. Plus I want to keep my car in a garage out of the elements and safe from any passers by.
We want to maximize the outside space we have. We have designed a garage with a large wooden roof top deck. There will also be a small yard between the back of the house and the garage but the roof deck will dramatically increase the amount of outdoor space we have in the back of our house.
I'm a somewhat serious woodworker. However the garage does not need to accommodate any of my woodworking hobby. I have a small but fairly well equipped 13 by 16 foot space in our basement for wood working. That will continue to be my woodworking space. One benefit of the new garage however will be that I can move some stuff out of the basement workshop into the garage and free up some much needed space there.
Design of the garage needs to match that of our house. Our house is a two story Chicago Graystone. This was a style fairly common in the area when it was originally developed after the Chicago fire 130 years ago. Originally it was a two flat with a family living on each floor. We purchased the house more than 10 years ago and did a major remodel - converting it into a single family home and making a fairly modern addition to the back while leaving the front of the house pretty much as it was originally built. The garage needs to match that semi- modern but also old vibe of the house.
I'll post a couple of more architectural drawings in a moment. I'll also take some photos of the workshop and post them up too (but only after I clean it up a bit).
Construction of the garage is going to start in 2 or 3 weeks hopefully. I already have my building permit. It took me 9 months to get that building permit but that's another story. My builder says he can get the garage done in 2 or 3 months. I'm doubtful but we will see. I will try to keep posting some construction pictures once the old garage is torn down and construction starts.
Thanks. Pic
Long time lerker and very infrequent poster here. I've been using this forum for years to mentally design my dream garage and I am finally able to start that project. I am calling this the Mary Kay Garage for reasons that I will make clear in a subsequent post.
Mine will not be a huge garage however as I live in the City of Chicago and my project has to fit on a standard size Chicago lot of 25 feet in width and 125 feet in length. The new garage will be a brick garage roughly 23 feet wide and 20 feet deep with a bump out making half the garage 4 feet deeper. The garage will also have a roof deck on top. Space is such a premium in the city that we want to get all the outdoor space that we can. The garage will replace a smaller wooden structure that is probably structurally sound but that definitely has some cosmetic issues. The drawing below will show the layout of the garage on our lot and its relation to our 125 year old two story graystone house.

I'll explain some of our parameters which lead to the design above.
Garage needs to fit on our city sized 25 by 125 lot. This should be pretty obvious. While I very definitely enjoy city living (we live in the Lakeview neighborhood near Wrigley Field in Chicago) being a car guy in the city involves compromises - the biggest of which is that space is very expensive. Basically I am building the biggest garage I can while still leaving space in our lot for the house and a small yard.
Garage needs to accommodate at least one project car and the tools to work on it. Its going to be tight but I am planning on putting a workbench, some storage, the typical mechanical tools, some sort of welding table and a two post lift in the space.
Garage also needs to be able to park one daily driver. My wife and I have two dailies and I really wish we could fit both of them but a three car garage is just not going to fit. That said we need to still park one of our cars on a nightly basis. Our neighborhood gets pretty crowded especially when there are Cubs games or on Friday or Saturday nights when people come in to the city to have dinner or go to bars. Most of the time its easy enough to park on the street in front of our house but we want to have at least one space in the garage so that if we are out for dinner on a Friday night that we have a place to park without the hassle of looking for a spot when the streets are crowded. Plus I want to keep my car in a garage out of the elements and safe from any passers by.
We want to maximize the outside space we have. We have designed a garage with a large wooden roof top deck. There will also be a small yard between the back of the house and the garage but the roof deck will dramatically increase the amount of outdoor space we have in the back of our house.
I'm a somewhat serious woodworker. However the garage does not need to accommodate any of my woodworking hobby. I have a small but fairly well equipped 13 by 16 foot space in our basement for wood working. That will continue to be my woodworking space. One benefit of the new garage however will be that I can move some stuff out of the basement workshop into the garage and free up some much needed space there.
Design of the garage needs to match that of our house. Our house is a two story Chicago Graystone. This was a style fairly common in the area when it was originally developed after the Chicago fire 130 years ago. Originally it was a two flat with a family living on each floor. We purchased the house more than 10 years ago and did a major remodel - converting it into a single family home and making a fairly modern addition to the back while leaving the front of the house pretty much as it was originally built. The garage needs to match that semi- modern but also old vibe of the house.
I'll post a couple of more architectural drawings in a moment. I'll also take some photos of the workshop and post them up too (but only after I clean it up a bit).
Construction of the garage is going to start in 2 or 3 weeks hopefully. I already have my building permit. It took me 9 months to get that building permit but that's another story. My builder says he can get the garage done in 2 or 3 months. I'm doubtful but we will see. I will try to keep posting some construction pictures once the old garage is torn down and construction starts.
Thanks. Pic













