I have a 24x24 detached garage in southern Minnesota. It is not insulated, heated, or cooled. It is on the downstream end of the driveway and we do get water inside during heavy rains. I'm working on trying to divert as much as possible before it gets in the garage but I still have a floor drain question. Currently there is a 24x24 inch hole in the concrete with a 2-1/2 PVC pipe that drains out just a few feet behind the garage. The garage is on a little bit of a slope but it isn't for maybe 30 feet past the back before the slope of the ground really increases. The pipe is basically right at ground level where it comes out.
The floor drain just has dirt at the bottom, and it has 2x4's around the outside and the steel plate near the top of the photo normally covers this. Water doesn't really drain that well around the corners and it feels like it can't be a good thing to put a bunch of water into this spot as a bunch will soak in, or potentially even worse, start to erode around the pipe. I added the hardware cloth cover because the first time I opened this it was fully turned into a rodent nest. Not sure if they came in from pipe, tunneled under, or just came in from above.
Aside from my concern about water under the slab, and the relatively poor drainage, I don't thing this thing is really up for being driven on. While we don't intentionally plan on driving over it, on days when only one car is in the garage (if my wife or I is traveling) it is tempting to park a little further from the walls which then puts this drain into a driving path.

I've considered trying to put a 16x16 catch basin in there but the commercial ones I've seen look like they'd be much better if the pipe were a bit lower, a bit larger in diameter, and not already covered by concrete. I'm also considering digging down a foot or more, and making a form that would support say a 16x16 grill and then pouring concrete at the bottom and sides to more or less make a concrete catch basin along with a support for an actual grill. If I go this route I'm guessing I don't want to make the finished thing very deep. Would it be a good or bad idea to embed a water proofing membrane in that concrete to reduce what can just seep into the ground?
We have no plans at this time for heating/insulating the garage but do want a place to park out of the snow in the winter, out of the UV in the summer, and out of any storms.
Thanks so much for any advice on this.
-Dan
The floor drain just has dirt at the bottom, and it has 2x4's around the outside and the steel plate near the top of the photo normally covers this. Water doesn't really drain that well around the corners and it feels like it can't be a good thing to put a bunch of water into this spot as a bunch will soak in, or potentially even worse, start to erode around the pipe. I added the hardware cloth cover because the first time I opened this it was fully turned into a rodent nest. Not sure if they came in from pipe, tunneled under, or just came in from above.
Aside from my concern about water under the slab, and the relatively poor drainage, I don't thing this thing is really up for being driven on. While we don't intentionally plan on driving over it, on days when only one car is in the garage (if my wife or I is traveling) it is tempting to park a little further from the walls which then puts this drain into a driving path.

I've considered trying to put a 16x16 catch basin in there but the commercial ones I've seen look like they'd be much better if the pipe were a bit lower, a bit larger in diameter, and not already covered by concrete. I'm also considering digging down a foot or more, and making a form that would support say a 16x16 grill and then pouring concrete at the bottom and sides to more or less make a concrete catch basin along with a support for an actual grill. If I go this route I'm guessing I don't want to make the finished thing very deep. Would it be a good or bad idea to embed a water proofing membrane in that concrete to reduce what can just seep into the ground?
We have no plans at this time for heating/insulating the garage but do want a place to park out of the snow in the winter, out of the UV in the summer, and out of any storms.
Thanks so much for any advice on this.
-Dan

