The workbench that came with my 100-year-old house was beat up, so I bought a box of left-over vinyl laminate flooring at the ReStore for $20 and floated it on top, secured with aluminum molding. It's held up well to both pounding and spills.
I cheaped out and used a box of leftover laminate flooring from ReStore -- just floated it on top and locked it in with aluminum molding.
It's been three years and seems to be holding up well to abuse and spills.
Workbench came with the 100-year-old house with a nice vise and not much else tool-wise. The bench top was dinged from decades of abuse, so I floated a new work surface using laminate flooring from the ReStore and filled with hand tools, mostly from yard and estate sales.
Up in the mountains we rarely get wet, snowman snow, just the fluffy variety.
So I've been using a corded leaf blower quite successfully on my walkways and sidewalk. It's quicker and does a better job clearing down to the pavement.
I buy the cheapest washer fluid, but what bugs me is when you get frost on the inside of the windshield.
I solved that by habitually knocking snow off my boots while entering and by cracking the windows open when parked on cold, clear days when the humidity is low.
Agree that you need multiple options.
Here in Montana I'll wear sneakers to 20 F, then L.L. Bean hiking boots to about 20 below and colder than that I get out the Sorel pack boots.
This from long ago (when they first came out) but I remember thinking "Why pay Black & Decker for a Workmate" when they're not really a workbench and I already have some saw horses.
Time would tell how wrong I was.