WiCkEdS GaRaGe
Member
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2022
- Messages
- 22
Ok I’ll start with I really have no clue what I’m doing. I didn’t start this project order right at all. I started with pouring pad thinking get it poured and the garage will come quicker. Well, concrete didn’t go as planed along with the fact I didn’t plan this better before getting started.
Bought house without a garage and the back right corner was sunken in holding what. Was a lot of big tree roots that was decaying. I was getting tired of the mosquito breeding ground with being a pain to mow with such uneven ground (plus more than I wanted to mow each week
).
So thinking get this tree stump and roots out, get the pad poured so that’s done. Thinking that gives me couple pluses on my side lol. So I hired a guy to pour a 27’x27’ 6” thick and given me 3 or 4” above the highest part of grade and 1/2” all way around with a down pitch to allow water to roll off. I already had a old slab that was poured in the back yard that I said I wanted to **** up to and use as little bit of concrete before I pulled in the garage. (I’d have 100’ of grass from street to garage so that few ft on concrete would of been nice) That came out to 8k
He saw I was goin to have to my the little metal shed I had and offered to do a shed pad for another 1k. I laughed and said do 500 and sure. Did 12’x11.1’ 4” thick
Well said and done my lowest spot is actually above the shed pad.
The garage pad ended up 26.7’x27.2’ and have a gap between the old pad and my new pad saying after they started he realized he couldnt **** up to old pad due to it wasn’t even to the fence. All he had to do was saw cut few inches, make sq and **** the pads together vs leaving me pad not right size to metal garage I’m planning on building w/ a gap I have to fill or fix somehow.
Well this is a year later. I have been so discussed with this job I have avoided it. Mostly due to no one to talk to about this. No one to ask what to do, what order do I need to take things etc etc. (oh while gap I have found out I have to have a permit. Ignorant to I have to ask permission to do something on property I bought.
)
Also I have found I have at least a ft I can move my chain fence back. I just have to clean out the small trees and bushes and vines that are growing behind and on the fence. That would of gave me a whole another ft the pad could of went back giving more yard in front or garage for kid to have space for activities.
So where the garage and shed pad meet they hold a lot of water. Where the garage would have to end up taking in a lot of water I’d assume pretty safely. Since he put shed and garage pad flush together there is no slope to roll water off like we discussed. It actually didn’t get that 1/2” slope around any edge. He just a round edge on and called it good.
More reason I haven’t done anything due to water holding and it being with pads together and the shed pad also being below grade on most of it. Since of this I was thinking of hiring a concrete guy to sq the pad up (it’s it’s kinda a upside L shape)
And need to extend the pad in front to fill in that gap and make it 27’ not 26.7’.
After talking more to metal building places I found if I order a 27x27 they would just sell me a 27x30 and cut it down in house and then ship it. Well I don’t like idea of paying for something, then cutting part off and keeping the materials. So since have to fill in gap I’ll just extend pad to 30’.
To fill in the L I have to cut down and move this tree that’s in my way (plus I don’t want one that close to the garage. It’s a dying tree anyways so for safety lol).
Hire a guy to cut it down. Well he drops the tree on my shed. Thankfully I’m kinda crafty so took some scrape wood and made a couple post to hold it up so can still keep the harelys dry. (Still have to get tree cut down
)
So I’ve learned I should of took tree down first without risk of hitting new concrete pad. (Ended up hitting the shed. Witch is better than concrete but if tree was first it wouldn’t of happened. Then I took chain fence out and put privacy fence up with giving me a ft pad then could of went farther back. Then do concrete pad. With better concrete knowledge like. Don’t do shed and garage pad together. Don’t do sloped or rounded edges. To do as they call a drip edge. Where allows the metal frame of the building to sit down some and be exact size of frame to have the metal siding slide overtop where frame rails and concrete met to fully stop water from leaking under. If I put it on now I’m putting a smaller building on then I’m paying for and will have massive water leakage.
Very sorry this is so long but a lot of info. A lot goin on and have no one, no help of any sort.
The pic of the building is i guess what I’m looking to end up with since she’s and garage pad or together. If roof goes all way across it has to help with water not hitting side of garage and rolling off shed roof and going between shed and the garage right?
Added pics of everything
Bought house without a garage and the back right corner was sunken in holding what. Was a lot of big tree roots that was decaying. I was getting tired of the mosquito breeding ground with being a pain to mow with such uneven ground (plus more than I wanted to mow each week
So thinking get this tree stump and roots out, get the pad poured so that’s done. Thinking that gives me couple pluses on my side lol. So I hired a guy to pour a 27’x27’ 6” thick and given me 3 or 4” above the highest part of grade and 1/2” all way around with a down pitch to allow water to roll off. I already had a old slab that was poured in the back yard that I said I wanted to **** up to and use as little bit of concrete before I pulled in the garage. (I’d have 100’ of grass from street to garage so that few ft on concrete would of been nice) That came out to 8k
He saw I was goin to have to my the little metal shed I had and offered to do a shed pad for another 1k. I laughed and said do 500 and sure. Did 12’x11.1’ 4” thick
Well said and done my lowest spot is actually above the shed pad.
The garage pad ended up 26.7’x27.2’ and have a gap between the old pad and my new pad saying after they started he realized he couldnt **** up to old pad due to it wasn’t even to the fence. All he had to do was saw cut few inches, make sq and **** the pads together vs leaving me pad not right size to metal garage I’m planning on building w/ a gap I have to fill or fix somehow.
Well this is a year later. I have been so discussed with this job I have avoided it. Mostly due to no one to talk to about this. No one to ask what to do, what order do I need to take things etc etc. (oh while gap I have found out I have to have a permit. Ignorant to I have to ask permission to do something on property I bought.
Also I have found I have at least a ft I can move my chain fence back. I just have to clean out the small trees and bushes and vines that are growing behind and on the fence. That would of gave me a whole another ft the pad could of went back giving more yard in front or garage for kid to have space for activities.
So where the garage and shed pad meet they hold a lot of water. Where the garage would have to end up taking in a lot of water I’d assume pretty safely. Since he put shed and garage pad flush together there is no slope to roll water off like we discussed. It actually didn’t get that 1/2” slope around any edge. He just a round edge on and called it good.
More reason I haven’t done anything due to water holding and it being with pads together and the shed pad also being below grade on most of it. Since of this I was thinking of hiring a concrete guy to sq the pad up (it’s it’s kinda a upside L shape)
And need to extend the pad in front to fill in that gap and make it 27’ not 26.7’.
After talking more to metal building places I found if I order a 27x27 they would just sell me a 27x30 and cut it down in house and then ship it. Well I don’t like idea of paying for something, then cutting part off and keeping the materials. So since have to fill in gap I’ll just extend pad to 30’.
To fill in the L I have to cut down and move this tree that’s in my way (plus I don’t want one that close to the garage. It’s a dying tree anyways so for safety lol).
Hire a guy to cut it down. Well he drops the tree on my shed. Thankfully I’m kinda crafty so took some scrape wood and made a couple post to hold it up so can still keep the harelys dry. (Still have to get tree cut down
So I’ve learned I should of took tree down first without risk of hitting new concrete pad. (Ended up hitting the shed. Witch is better than concrete but if tree was first it wouldn’t of happened. Then I took chain fence out and put privacy fence up with giving me a ft pad then could of went farther back. Then do concrete pad. With better concrete knowledge like. Don’t do shed and garage pad together. Don’t do sloped or rounded edges. To do as they call a drip edge. Where allows the metal frame of the building to sit down some and be exact size of frame to have the metal siding slide overtop where frame rails and concrete met to fully stop water from leaking under. If I put it on now I’m putting a smaller building on then I’m paying for and will have massive water leakage.
Very sorry this is so long but a lot of info. A lot goin on and have no one, no help of any sort.
The pic of the building is i guess what I’m looking to end up with since she’s and garage pad or together. If roof goes all way across it has to help with water not hitting side of garage and rolling off shed roof and going between shed and the garage right?
Added pics of everything
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