padroo
Well-known member
Good chance all labor is Union.
Good chance all labor is Union.
If you plan on framing walls, you can do concrete. I built my own forms and poured my own walls. I did not pour the floor
Tree cutting cost: $1,000
Excavation: $ 800
Plywood for footing $ 250
16' chute $300
Concrete for footing $1,100
Wood for forms $1,000
Concrete for foundation $2,300
Wire mesh, pins, etc. $400
Concrete for slab $2,000
Labor for slab $1,000
Total cost before framing walls was about $10,000 and I did most of the work myself. A licensed, insured contractor I figured would have been 1.5 to 2 times the cost.
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=259512
you don't need the whole pad 6", just where you're going to mount the lift lol
This could make the slab crack.![]()
I am thinking concrete block would be the cheapest route??
ok guys, just spoke to the town and this is the story:
750 sq ft max and 15ft high if I dont want to apply with a variance.
...
thoughts? Suggestions?
The lady told me the roof ridge! I hope she is wrongI will clarify tomorrow. Why cant it be the same height as my house?
jackstand and ddawg16, you saying with a 15ft peak I am still able to have a 4 post lift on either side of the garage?? I was thinking the roof would be to low on the sides??
It's not like your building a McDonald's![]()
You'll be fine with block, and 15' ridge height will be fine also. I would think that you could have a 10' wall with a decent (5/12) pitch for 750 s/f building roughly 24x30 with the ridge running the 30' dimension. You might want to bring the block up (beyond slab elev.) so your only framing 8' of wall. This gives you a sturdy lower wall up above moisture issues, inside & out.
