Aladinsane07
Well-known member
Well the time has finally come to start a thread for my new shop. My wife and I have been in our house for 5 years come June. When we were shopping she had a long list of musts for our new house; I had one - at least a useable shop space. Shocker: she got all her wants and I got this 16 ft. x 15 ft. tiny garage. That's not to say I didn't try and make the most of it. I've finished tons of projects and maintained all of our vehicles (as well as many close acquaintances) out of this sub-optimal space. But to say we've outgrown it is the understatement of the year. I snapped this during one of my frequent re-arranging / cleanup sessions.

The last few years I've had it in my head that THIS would be the summer I was building a new shop. I just finally came to the realization that there's not going to be an extended period of time where life doesn't get in the way and all the stars will align. So it's finally happening. Unfortunately, I live in Minneapolis proper and they really like to discourage building at any chance possible. The permitting has been a challenge to say the least. I'll spare you all the details.
One positive I have going for me is that I live on a very old block without an alley and it was zoned before the city "standardized" on 5,200 sq.ft lots. That means I can take advantage of the 10% of total lot size (vs. the 660 sq.ft max that is usual), for a hefty fee of course. 10% of the total lot, 8,720 sq.ft, puts me at 872 sq.ft of buildable space. I'm also opting for as high a wall as allowable - 10 ft. at top plate. Oh, and another fee. Here's an aerial of where the new shop will live. The final dimensions will be 33.5 ft x 26 ft., or 871 sq.ft.

I've tried to absorb as much as I could from this community over the last few years. All that reading has essentially boiled down to me deciding on a few crucial elements to this build: as much square footage as legally allowable, radiant floor heating in-slab, half attic trusses and half vaulted trusses to allow for a lift in the future. I have concrete scheduled for the end of the month so it's starting to feel slightly real. I have a few work trips before that time (life getting in the way), so it'll be tight to get the current building unloaded (ugh), things moved into storage, and then torn down.
Thanks to anyone who reads and participates along the way. I'm handling everything except for concrete and roofing, so I'll take all the advice I can get.
- Evan

The last few years I've had it in my head that THIS would be the summer I was building a new shop. I just finally came to the realization that there's not going to be an extended period of time where life doesn't get in the way and all the stars will align. So it's finally happening. Unfortunately, I live in Minneapolis proper and they really like to discourage building at any chance possible. The permitting has been a challenge to say the least. I'll spare you all the details.
One positive I have going for me is that I live on a very old block without an alley and it was zoned before the city "standardized" on 5,200 sq.ft lots. That means I can take advantage of the 10% of total lot size (vs. the 660 sq.ft max that is usual), for a hefty fee of course. 10% of the total lot, 8,720 sq.ft, puts me at 872 sq.ft of buildable space. I'm also opting for as high a wall as allowable - 10 ft. at top plate. Oh, and another fee. Here's an aerial of where the new shop will live. The final dimensions will be 33.5 ft x 26 ft., or 871 sq.ft.

I've tried to absorb as much as I could from this community over the last few years. All that reading has essentially boiled down to me deciding on a few crucial elements to this build: as much square footage as legally allowable, radiant floor heating in-slab, half attic trusses and half vaulted trusses to allow for a lift in the future. I have concrete scheduled for the end of the month so it's starting to feel slightly real. I have a few work trips before that time (life getting in the way), so it'll be tight to get the current building unloaded (ugh), things moved into storage, and then torn down.
Thanks to anyone who reads and participates along the way. I'm handling everything except for concrete and roofing, so I'll take all the advice I can get.
- Evan


























