HPRifleman
Member Emeritus
I'm curious what the opinions are on installing gutters on a garage. Positioning downspouts for my garage may prove a challenge so I want to know if you guys added them to your builds.
As to rainwater volume, if you had a 28 x 24, with 1 ft overhangs, that'd be 30 x 26 =780 sq ft. A 1" rain would be 65 cu ft, or about 500 gal, or about 2 1/2 cu yes. Fill up 9 rain barrels.I have a small 10x16 shed with an A frame anchored to a slab and still plan to install gutters both front and back with downspouts on side to connect to buried and graded pvc to drain the water away from the slab. Relative to the building and concrete work costs, gutter and drainage work is cheap mitigation to minimize water issues over the lifetime of the building.
If you don't have the grade to drain water away from your garage, consider a dry well or other drainage system. Installing one depends on how much roof square footage of rain water you're trying to displace.
Under certain conditions gutters can fill with ice or snow.No gutters on our new 24'x40' pole building. We are in a snow area and gutters take a beating. No gutters on the house or 30'x90' old building. I would like to have 40' of gutter on the one side of the new building just to move the water away from that area. The other side drops off, so no worry there.
Anyone have snow/ice proof gutters ??
On a metal roof? I would like to know too. I have been told the key is snow brakes but I have also seen them ripped off along with the gutters.No gutters on our new 24'x40' pole building. We are in a snow area and gutters take a beating. No gutters on the house or 30'x90' old building. I would like to have 40' of gutter on the one side of the new building just to move the water away from that area. The other side drops off, so no worry there.
Anyone have snow/ice proof gutters ??
Crazy!I could not get a build permit for my shop without ‘gutters and down’ permit! It was the first thing out of their mouth. I had to get it before a Build permit!
Where, without gutters/downspouts, will the roof run off water go now? Will it magically disappear?My problem isn't cost or grading. It's finding a place for the gutters/downspouts to output the water. I have an area where the logical downspout location would be dumping water on the driveway in front of the garage. I see this as problematic, especially in winter.
I'm skeptical of running the downspouts into the ground and moving it to the perimeter via in-ground PVC as that has the potential for getting clogged with leaves, dirt, etc.
Not sure if it's the correct term, but try looking into scuppers. They are a box filter on the down spout. They will filter out a majority of the spouting debris.My problem isn't cost or grading. It's finding a place for the gutters/downspouts to output the water. I have an area where the logical downspout location would be dumping water on the driveway in front of the garage. I see this as problematic, especially in winter.
I'm skeptical of running the downspouts into the ground and moving it to the perimeter via in-ground PVC as that has the potential for getting clogged with leaves, dirt, etc.
I wish that my garage had them. Every time I try to go in or out of my garage when its raining, I get dripped on because theres no gutters. Im seriously looking at installing them in the near future.I'm curious what the opinions are on installing gutters on a garage. Positioning downspouts for my garage may prove a challenge so I want to know if you guys added them to your builds.
I have a 32x56’, with 8/12 metal roof....a gutter guy that was recommended to me said if the snow n ice ever takes them off, he would replace them free of charge. He set the gutters just below the angle of the roof. Shop has been up for 9 winters...no problems3 sides of my garage have no gutters, just river rock a foot deep with a 4" tile to carry the water away. The front over hang has gutter to prevent getting dripped on. It was a quick project project and I used 10' section and seamed them together. I'm not worried about the the one seam that leaks, however, it's right in the middle of one of the over head doors.
Lesson learned, I should have started at the other end when hanging it and paid attention to the seam areas.
