Denkikun
Active member
Hi Guys, Im a newbie here to the forum, and really appreciate that the Garage Journal exists!
I REALLY need some advice. I've been spending way too much time trying to figure this one out on my own....
I have a garage heating conundrum... I have a 1950s house with a garage under what used to be a covered outside screened in room. The garage is 24X20 with only 7 foot ceilings. all walls and ceiling of the garage are poured concrete. Walls are roughly 10 inches thick, ceiling is a concrete pad about 6 inches thick. I would like to heat the space to achieve a baseline 55-60 degrees in the winter. Since replacing the garage door with a new insulated one and those rubberized gaskets around the sides, I am able to hold 55 degrees inside when the temp is 30 outside.
This winter is the year to finish the father and son car restoration on the Triumph, so I plan to be in there a good deal, and would want to have 65 degrees with potentially zero outside for 2 or 3 hours at a time while working and try to keep a baseline of 55 or so.
I am trying to stay close to $500 for the installation (doing all labor myself)
I have looked at various options:
Ventless Gas heater.......... I'm sensitive to the smell of these, currently have one in there (see pic) that stinks, big time
Vented Gas heater......... I can't for the life of me figure out how I could vent one. I believe that my ceiling is too low for something like the Big Max or Hot Dawg heaters.... also for the overhead infrared heaters... ceiling is 7 ft 1 inch. I believe that this leaves me with only a direct vent wall unit or vertically oriented "wall furnace" with a top vent. The only options that I can see for venting are boring a hole through the slab above, somehow enclosing a vertical run of B vent through the sun room above and out through the roof of the house, or blocking out one of my glass block windows leaving a big space in the middle for a direct vent wall unit, or boring a giant hole in the concrete wall between my two glass block windows (looks like those units want a giant 11x11 inch opening!!), or trying to sneak a vent out the rear of the house next to the garage door that runs over the interior door to the garage... I think that I could figure out how to do this if I could find a wall mount vented NG heater that has a top or top/side vent rather than a vent directly out the rear of it..... I am totally stumped. Here are some pics of my situation... I have the gas hook up right there, just cannot figure out how to vent....
current stinky setup..

interior view of rear facing garage wall next to garage door - very little space above wooden interior door there to get a good rise across the run of the vent pipe

exterior view of that back wall next to garage door... pointing at the spot where vent would be - there is a soffit quite a ways off above...

Glass block window wall exterior - no soffit above, vent would be at least 4 ft below windows

Interior side of glass block wall

Electric heater....... I do not currently have 240V to the garage, and would have to add a circuit and run about 65 feet of wire to add this.. I was looking at a 5000 Watt heater, but am not sure that it would actually do the job... also concerned about the high cost of heating with the electric heater...
Apologies for the crazy long post here, and thanks so very much for any advice you might have!!!!
I REALLY need some advice. I've been spending way too much time trying to figure this one out on my own....
I have a garage heating conundrum... I have a 1950s house with a garage under what used to be a covered outside screened in room. The garage is 24X20 with only 7 foot ceilings. all walls and ceiling of the garage are poured concrete. Walls are roughly 10 inches thick, ceiling is a concrete pad about 6 inches thick. I would like to heat the space to achieve a baseline 55-60 degrees in the winter. Since replacing the garage door with a new insulated one and those rubberized gaskets around the sides, I am able to hold 55 degrees inside when the temp is 30 outside.
This winter is the year to finish the father and son car restoration on the Triumph, so I plan to be in there a good deal, and would want to have 65 degrees with potentially zero outside for 2 or 3 hours at a time while working and try to keep a baseline of 55 or so.
I am trying to stay close to $500 for the installation (doing all labor myself)
I have looked at various options:
Ventless Gas heater.......... I'm sensitive to the smell of these, currently have one in there (see pic) that stinks, big time
Vented Gas heater......... I can't for the life of me figure out how I could vent one. I believe that my ceiling is too low for something like the Big Max or Hot Dawg heaters.... also for the overhead infrared heaters... ceiling is 7 ft 1 inch. I believe that this leaves me with only a direct vent wall unit or vertically oriented "wall furnace" with a top vent. The only options that I can see for venting are boring a hole through the slab above, somehow enclosing a vertical run of B vent through the sun room above and out through the roof of the house, or blocking out one of my glass block windows leaving a big space in the middle for a direct vent wall unit, or boring a giant hole in the concrete wall between my two glass block windows (looks like those units want a giant 11x11 inch opening!!), or trying to sneak a vent out the rear of the house next to the garage door that runs over the interior door to the garage... I think that I could figure out how to do this if I could find a wall mount vented NG heater that has a top or top/side vent rather than a vent directly out the rear of it..... I am totally stumped. Here are some pics of my situation... I have the gas hook up right there, just cannot figure out how to vent....
current stinky setup..

interior view of rear facing garage wall next to garage door - very little space above wooden interior door there to get a good rise across the run of the vent pipe

exterior view of that back wall next to garage door... pointing at the spot where vent would be - there is a soffit quite a ways off above...

Glass block window wall exterior - no soffit above, vent would be at least 4 ft below windows

Interior side of glass block wall

Electric heater....... I do not currently have 240V to the garage, and would have to add a circuit and run about 65 feet of wire to add this.. I was looking at a 5000 Watt heater, but am not sure that it would actually do the job... also concerned about the high cost of heating with the electric heater...
Apologies for the crazy long post here, and thanks so very much for any advice you might have!!!!


