This probably won't solve anything but it might make me feel better.
So after six years of having my attached garage filled with stuff that I could never find I decided to clean it out, finish the inside, and start using it for its intended purpose.
I really did have visions of parking two cars in there.
And here it is:
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Looks good right. With the cars in there as shown there is enough room to fully open any of the doors on each one. Even the rear passenger door on the Accord clears the bumpout for my fireplace.
Well not so fast. In order to get them in there this way, I had to pull them in with the side mirrors clearing the door frame by about an inch. Not really something I want to have to pull off twice every day. Or have my wife attempt if you want to know the real issue. If we park them closer then the driver of the right side car has trouble getting out. The right hand car could be backed in, but again not really something I want the wife trying to pull off.
And of course, with them in there this way, there is no room for anything at all down either side.
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And not much room in the front either.
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If I put a workbench on the back wall, I would have to back out one or both cars to actually use it. Just for the record, the garage measures 21'10" by 21'11" inside with a 16 foot door.
RANT ON
How EFFING hard is it for a builder to build a decent sized garage?!
This is a two car garage? Seriously? And a 16 foot door? An 8 foot door for a single car is a squeeze. This is basically two 8 foot doors with no room in between.
My dad's house was built in 1970. He doesn't use the attached garage as a work space and stores very little in there other than two cars. I don't know the measuements but you can park two caddies in there with no problems. And I mean old caddies, big pimp De Villes from the 70s.
It has got to be at least 26 feet wide with with a 20 foot door.
My house was built around 2000, (I am not the original owner), and I get this ****? How much would it have cost to make my garage wider? Three to four hundred bucks? Even if it was 24 feet wide with a 18 foot door, at least I could get the cars in and out comfortably.
Here is the real kicker, I am a real estate broker so I get to see a lot of houses including new construction. A lot of new houses have garages that are even smaller than mine! I am seeing a lot of 21x20s or 20x20s. And that is the outside measurements. WTH, are we all supposed to drive Smart Cars now? (Although, I would drive a Abarth Fiat if it came with that hot Italian chick. :hitit
And another thing! Notice how the side and rear walls are set on a mud sill that is directly on the slab. Notice that the foundation wall of the house is about three courses of brick higher than the slab?
How damn hard would it have been to run three courses, two bricks wide around the other three sides and set the wall on top of that? Then I could hose out the garage without getting walls wet. What would that have cost? Maybe $100, $150? At least Ridebutter's builder got that part RIGHT.
I see Code Enforcement officers giving builders a hard time over the dumbest stuff sometimes and yet this garbage is perfectly ok.
RANT OFF
I guess I need to get back to deciding how to use my garage. It sure isn't going to be by parking two cars in it.
BTW, feel free to come up to the pulpit and testify how your builder screwed up your garage. Maybe I will feel better with some company.
So after six years of having my attached garage filled with stuff that I could never find I decided to clean it out, finish the inside, and start using it for its intended purpose.
I really did have visions of parking two cars in there.
And here it is:
View media item 22531
Looks good right. With the cars in there as shown there is enough room to fully open any of the doors on each one. Even the rear passenger door on the Accord clears the bumpout for my fireplace.
Well not so fast. In order to get them in there this way, I had to pull them in with the side mirrors clearing the door frame by about an inch. Not really something I want to have to pull off twice every day. Or have my wife attempt if you want to know the real issue. If we park them closer then the driver of the right side car has trouble getting out. The right hand car could be backed in, but again not really something I want the wife trying to pull off.
And of course, with them in there this way, there is no room for anything at all down either side.
View media item 22532
And not much room in the front either.
View media item 22533
If I put a workbench on the back wall, I would have to back out one or both cars to actually use it. Just for the record, the garage measures 21'10" by 21'11" inside with a 16 foot door.
RANT ON
How EFFING hard is it for a builder to build a decent sized garage?!

This is a two car garage? Seriously? And a 16 foot door? An 8 foot door for a single car is a squeeze. This is basically two 8 foot doors with no room in between.
My dad's house was built in 1970. He doesn't use the attached garage as a work space and stores very little in there other than two cars. I don't know the measuements but you can park two caddies in there with no problems. And I mean old caddies, big pimp De Villes from the 70s.
It has got to be at least 26 feet wide with with a 20 foot door.My house was built around 2000, (I am not the original owner), and I get this ****? How much would it have cost to make my garage wider? Three to four hundred bucks? Even if it was 24 feet wide with a 18 foot door, at least I could get the cars in and out comfortably.
Here is the real kicker, I am a real estate broker so I get to see a lot of houses including new construction. A lot of new houses have garages that are even smaller than mine! I am seeing a lot of 21x20s or 20x20s. And that is the outside measurements. WTH, are we all supposed to drive Smart Cars now? (Although, I would drive a Abarth Fiat if it came with that hot Italian chick. :hitit
And another thing! Notice how the side and rear walls are set on a mud sill that is directly on the slab. Notice that the foundation wall of the house is about three courses of brick higher than the slab?
How damn hard would it have been to run three courses, two bricks wide around the other three sides and set the wall on top of that? Then I could hose out the garage without getting walls wet. What would that have cost? Maybe $100, $150? At least Ridebutter's builder got that part RIGHT.
I see Code Enforcement officers giving builders a hard time over the dumbest stuff sometimes and yet this garbage is perfectly ok.
RANT OFF
I guess I need to get back to deciding how to use my garage. It sure isn't going to be by parking two cars in it.
BTW, feel free to come up to the pulpit and testify how your builder screwed up your garage. Maybe I will feel better with some company.
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