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Best garage in a box type non permanent

nationalminer84

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Jul 11, 2013
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73
Location
National Mine, Mi
so, I bought the adjacent lot to me from the county. Problem is that I cannot build on it due to railroad right of way, I can however put up a temporary structure. I was thinking of one of those shed in a box type to house my ATVS, snowmobile and 14' fishing boat. I have seen some cheap ones that don't hold up and some that seem like they do anyone have experience with these things?
 
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rieferman

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May 18, 2009
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Collegeville PA (30 min west of Philly)
A regular shed is considered temporary in my area since they can be easily picked up and moved when needed (most shed sales places also offer "shed moving" service for reasonable price... or some PVC pipes and your ATV would do it). If you expect the railroad to envoke their right of way fairly infrequently, this is what I would do. Will look nice and last a long time.
 

theoldwizard1

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Feb 22, 2011
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43,250
Location
SE MI
By "in a box" I assume you are referring to "fabric" over some kind of frame.

I have a cheap one with no sides. It does not hold up well to weather. The good ones are quite expensive compared to the cheap ones but the fabric comes with a multi-year warranty.

I think this would be a good option for you, but check with your local building department. Some place may not allow them even though the good ones look like regular buildings.

I would lay down 4-6" of 3/4" gravel and compact it. Then cover that with at with 2-4" of finer gravel and compact that. Your "floor" should be high and dry !
 

kbs2244

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Nov 11, 2006
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14,065
In most places, if you go with fabric walls it is ctemporary concidered a "tent" and thus temporary.
Not he most secure, but it may pass inspection.
 
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whyNick?

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Jul 10, 2013
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Midwest
I've had one from Shelterlogic for 5 or 6 years. It's on the second cover, the first one lasted about 4 years. It has withstood some high winds as well as some heavy snow accumulation on a couple of occasions when I forgot to clear it off. Overall I'm happy.
 

cdsvt

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Jul 25, 2013
Messages
52
I had good luck using one I bought from FarmTek before I had a garage. It was reasonably priced and worked fine. My father has had one of theirs for years as a storage area and he's been happy with it too.
 
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nolimits76

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Jul 11, 2013
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959
Location
Oklahoma
Shipping container is your answer. Ugly as sin, but lots of bang for the buck, very secure and mobile (assuming you have the right equipment to move it). Check water ports and also semi truck yards for used items.

That being said, my company builds bridges. We deal with the railroads quite a bit. Their right of way is something they take EXTREMELY serious! Here are some of the things we have to work around and should give you an idea how crazy it can be to work with railroads. I know what is done is done, and I wish you the best but because of my own experiences, there is no way I would want to touch that property with a 100' pole.

- If we perform work within 75' of the tracks, we have to hire a dedicated flagman. This is a railroad employee that sits in the truck and "flags" our guys when a train is on the way. We have a small amount of time to clear and get out of the way of the train. This guy, and his truck costs about $1,250 per day for an 8 hour shift! We are required to pay this EACH day the flagger is required on-site.

- We have to submit engineered plans showing how we intend to prevent debris from falling on the tracks.

- If our equipment/trucks need to cross the tracks that is a separate plan with temporary protection over the tracks.

- Not to mention it takes an act of god sometimes to make a move across the tracks.

- Fast is not a word in their vocabulary unless you have f*cked something up and causing problems to their tracks.

Think big -- something that causes a small delay here, creates a chain effect across the country, literally. Consequently, this is why they are so serious and non-flexible in many of their ways. Be careful how you tread and don't think anything isn't a big deal with them, because it is likely a very big deal.

Which rail is it? Union Pacific? Burlington? Or a small local rail -- who can sometimes be easier to work with than the big ones?
 
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