Joel Thomas
Member
I am embarking on my mission to build a garage onto my friends' house that they just bought. Building permits will be researched, measurements taken, plans drawn and re-drawn, concrete jackhammered, removed, footings dug, walls and roof framed, electrified, sheathed, sided, and finally insulated and finished with sheetrock.
I plan to use as many reclaimed materials as possible. It will be roofed with corrugated steel with stripes of green translucent corrugated roofing as skylights. I am not sure what it will be sided with, probably the horizontal beadboard siding to match the house.
Inside, I will have a steel fabrication shop and a textile& screenprinting facility. The top will have a full loft for me to live in. It will be about 3/4 the height of an entire story. The plans need to be drafted and then refined.
Here are some photos of the house:
This is the side the garage is going. The crappy addition probably never got a permit as the roof line along the left edge has no overhang and it is a shoddy structure sheathed in nothing more than plywood. It will have to come down before a foundation is started. I will probabbly at least have to jackhammer up the old shifty slab around the perimeter for the footing, I am not looking forward to hammering the whole thing up, so hopefully I'll be able to pour a new slab over the existing one with some wire mesh reinforcement in the new layer over the old one. Input welcomed.
I plan to use as many reclaimed materials as possible. It will be roofed with corrugated steel with stripes of green translucent corrugated roofing as skylights. I am not sure what it will be sided with, probably the horizontal beadboard siding to match the house.
Inside, I will have a steel fabrication shop and a textile& screenprinting facility. The top will have a full loft for me to live in. It will be about 3/4 the height of an entire story. The plans need to be drafted and then refined.
Here are some photos of the house:
This is the side the garage is going. The crappy addition probably never got a permit as the roof line along the left edge has no overhang and it is a shoddy structure sheathed in nothing more than plywood. It will have to come down before a foundation is started. I will probabbly at least have to jackhammer up the old shifty slab around the perimeter for the footing, I am not looking forward to hammering the whole thing up, so hopefully I'll be able to pour a new slab over the existing one with some wire mesh reinforcement in the new layer over the old one. Input welcomed.
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