I have been meaning to post this for a while but it took a bit to collect all the photos and just sit down and do it. Having to convert iPhone Heic photos to png did not help matters.
Project Summary
I have a three car attached garage but it is very shallow, only 18 feet deep. Even with my relatively small car I was always having to walk around it. There was no way to even put anything in the trunk if the garage door was closed.
My first thought to make it deeper was to go in from the front of the garage. This would have taken about 5 feet from the family room. The more I looked at this the less compelling it became for a number of reasons. Load bearing wall, moving a fireplace, laundry now in the garage, only lengthen two bays, less sq ft living area. That left going out into the driveway. From the plat I had about 10 feet of setback to work with. There were three main challenges going this direction.
1. Matching the brick
2. Blending the roof line
3. Removing the existing garage door load bearing wall.
Concerning the brick, that style had been discontinued (of course). I was told by the contractor there is a staining process that can be used. After some research and contacting the sub who would be doing it my skepticism was somewhat reduced.
Concerning the roof line, after staring at it endlessly and discussing with contractors nothing was looking that compelling. Finally the contractor who actually got the job said, just envision “pulling” the corner out. After he drew it out I went aha. I see it. Very simple.
What to do with the existing load bearing wall where the garage doors were originally? First thought is just leave them there. Problem is that limits usable space and makes it look like an add-on. Also what about the door openers once they are moved? Would the wall interfere? On these they go back around 10 feet. When I mentioned the wall I got a black stare from some of the contractors. They were out. The contractor I went with did not want to put a pole in and originally envisioned it flush across the ceiling. The area above is attic. More on that later.
Here is what we are starting with. Garage is flush with side of the house. This is a corner lot.
Project Summary
I have a three car attached garage but it is very shallow, only 18 feet deep. Even with my relatively small car I was always having to walk around it. There was no way to even put anything in the trunk if the garage door was closed.
My first thought to make it deeper was to go in from the front of the garage. This would have taken about 5 feet from the family room. The more I looked at this the less compelling it became for a number of reasons. Load bearing wall, moving a fireplace, laundry now in the garage, only lengthen two bays, less sq ft living area. That left going out into the driveway. From the plat I had about 10 feet of setback to work with. There were three main challenges going this direction.
1. Matching the brick
2. Blending the roof line
3. Removing the existing garage door load bearing wall.
Concerning the brick, that style had been discontinued (of course). I was told by the contractor there is a staining process that can be used. After some research and contacting the sub who would be doing it my skepticism was somewhat reduced.
Concerning the roof line, after staring at it endlessly and discussing with contractors nothing was looking that compelling. Finally the contractor who actually got the job said, just envision “pulling” the corner out. After he drew it out I went aha. I see it. Very simple.
What to do with the existing load bearing wall where the garage doors were originally? First thought is just leave them there. Problem is that limits usable space and makes it look like an add-on. Also what about the door openers once they are moved? Would the wall interfere? On these they go back around 10 feet. When I mentioned the wall I got a black stare from some of the contractors. They were out. The contractor I went with did not want to put a pole in and originally envisioned it flush across the ceiling. The area above is attic. More on that later.
Here is what we are starting with. Garage is flush with side of the house. This is a corner lot.