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Garage Room Divider

Bill97Z

Active member
Joined
Aug 7, 2007
Messages
29
I want the ability to section of a portion of the garage that is a dedicate work/shop area. I am thinking of "shower curtain" type divider where I can install a rod track, and a long pull curtain to enclose the shop area when I want and open it up when I want. I am having a hard time coming up a DIY design and am looking for ideas. For the track, I can use long closet hanger rods. I can't do any curves, but I can use multiple curtains and rods to handle corners. For the curtains, I am drawing a blank unless I buy material and have them made. I would use a shower curtain panel, but it's not long enough. I can use multiple panels, but they would need to be at least 7" high and able to accept hooks to attach to the track/rod system. Any suggestions? The total linear length I want to section off is about 12 feet long.
 
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1Garageman

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Joined
May 12, 2009
Messages
4,417
Location
Columbus, Ohio
What about just hanging a plain old big pipe going horizontaly to the ground put you curting rods on it and hang a big cheap tarp on it, from Harbor Freight or something?

I might do the same thing in my garage. I have a 3 car garage and the small car area is all my work area with my tools and lumber.
 
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Bill97Z

Active member
Joined
Aug 7, 2007
Messages
29
I guess a tarp would work, but i would want something that is clean and neat looking. I use can use the grommets on the tarp to hook onto the bar (or pipe) run horizontally along the ceiling.
 

WNYflyer

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Joined
Sep 13, 2009
Messages
2,115
Location
Lockport, NY
I have thought about this also for my garage. How about Dupont's "Tyvek" house wrap for material ? I think it comes in 9' wide rolls but not sure. Could roll the top edge and tape up to double your material where you hang it. Maybe able to get some leftovers from a contractor.
 

RoarkIndustrialSolutions

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2009
Messages
212
Location
Virginia
I'm a distributor for Goff's Curtain Walls that are used for this purpose. PM me or contact me at [email protected]. I recently supplied another GJ member a curtain wall to separate his metal working area from his woodworking area.

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pirate

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 8, 2006
Messages
99
Location
Alabama
Have no idea how expensive it might be but what about the track that mounts to the ceiling in hospitals for the privacy curtains around beds. I think the tack uses some kind of roller which allows the curtain to move smoothly. They probably have a lot of different cutain styles also.
 

Jack Olsen

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Staff member
Joined
Mar 22, 2009
Messages
6,678
Location
Los Angeles
My first thought was, 'why a track?' If the section you're dividing off is essentially two walls at right angles to each other, why not use some kind of roll-down curtain (something that operates like a window shade or a pull-down map)? Rolled up, it would just sit along the ceiling -- there isn't a track to get jammed or dirty, and there isn't a stress point (where you tug a curtain) that's liable to fail.

You could look for large shaded commercial window covers on the second-hand market, or pick up the mechanism from a broken swimming pool cover.

Of course, you could also go for the purpose-built curtains that Roark shows. That would definitely be the path with the least amount of trial and error and difficult-to-source stuff.
 

danfromsyr

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2009
Messages
11,739
Location
Cicero, NY
I use the heavy duck canvas tarps from Home depot to divide my garage into 1/3rds
for this feb I added a plastic dropcloth to limit where my nat gas heater had to heat.. worked better then I'd thought, as it wasn't sealed to the floor. but was quite colder on the other side while toasty on the heated side.

the canvas duck tarps are $50ea, I bought 4 when we 1st moved in. so they'll last a long time.. though will get dirty if handled with dirty gloves. one learns to open by brushing with the back of the hand.

best..
Dan in NY
 

RoarkIndustrialSolutions

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2009
Messages
212
Location
Virginia
Great point Jack. Maybe I should show more of Goff's solutions since they can do a roll up as well. Didn't mean to pigeon hole with posting the video.

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My first thought was, 'why a track?' If the section you're dividing off is essentially two walls at right angles to each other, why not use some kind of roll-down curtain (something that operates like a window shade or a pull-down map)? Rolled up, it would just sit along the ceiling -- there isn't a track to get jammed or dirty, and there isn't a stress point (where you tug a curtain) that's liable to fail.

You could look for large shaded commercial window covers on the second-hand market, or pick up the mechanism from a broken swimming pool cover.

Of course, you could also go for the purpose-built curtains that Roark shows. That would definitely be the path with the least amount of trial and error and difficult-to-source stuff.
 

zkslawn

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2010
Messages
53
someone i know used conduit on the ceiling. and than had some metal rings that hooked to a heavier duty tarp.. it looks really good.. he used it for painting cars..
 
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RoarkIndustrialSolutions

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2009
Messages
212
Location
Virginia
There are different materials depending upon the application. Weldview passes CPAI-84 & California Fire Retardancy Tests. Safety/privacy screens meet NFPA-701 & California Fire Marshal Standards. Harshguard withstands caustic &
corrosive chemicals.

http://www.goffscurtainwalls.com/documents/Goff_Weldview07v2.pdf

http://www.goffscurtainwalls.com/pdfs/Goff_HarshGuardFlrs.pdf

They make flame retardant canvas tarps. I am not keen on the idea of having a big flammable plastic sheet hanging in my shop.
 

little d

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 13, 2009
Messages
815
Location
NW Oklahoma
danfromsyr, im thinking about the same thing. i wonder if anyone knows how fire resistant the canves tarpe are? i know if ya hold a fire to them that they will go up but, im talking about sparks from a grinder, ect...
 

mebedave

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
260
Location
Atlantic county area, New Jersey USA
Last edited:
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Bill97Z

Active member
Joined
Aug 7, 2007
Messages
29
Nice ideas guys, I am looking to keep this budget as eventually I may just finish the area off. Rods and some kind of inexpensive heavy duty curtains it will probably be.
 

TONE

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 5, 2006
Messages
1,866
Big time bucks, but a multi-panel sliding system would be sweet.

Kinda like a shower door, but huge with 7-10 panels.

You could make the pannels and buy the track.
 

maxpat82

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 9, 2012
Messages
275
I did it in my old garage with simple hook screwed to the ceiling and canvas textile with tarp grommet every 2' (canvas was from an old destroyed gazebo, but you can get firedproof canvas in pretty much any textile shop).
I had hook in a 2' grid on almost the entire ceiling(22x26 garage).

Was used to keep grinding dust contained in that area...worked awesome

the Goff's curtain wall look extra nice....but must be $$$$ :|
 
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Slednut

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 20, 2012
Messages
2,550
Location
Washington state
I did it with a tarp, added more eyes and it's hanging from a taut cable. Now I only have to cool/heat the shop part of our garage.
 

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kbs2244

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 11, 2006
Messages
14,065
I have seen area rugs used for this.
Cheap ones are heavy as curtains.

The creative one was a roll up where the rope provided the twisting force.
 

Eggman

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 29, 2010
Messages
82
Location
St. Louis
Uni-strut makes for a nice sliding/rolling track for curtains. I put up some room darkening curtains in my living room with uni-strut and some plastic conduit clamps. Couldn't justify $75 for a crappy looking curtain rod that didn't fit tight up against the wall.
 
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