BoilermakerFan
Well-known member
Subtitle 1: Just waiting until we can move so I can have a bigger, higher quality garage!
Subtitle 2: Putting lipstick on a pig.
I've lurked on GJ for years. We live in the city on a lot and a half. We bought the house in March 2000. We only planned to be here 5-7 years. Many of you know how that goes. During the last 17 years we have almost torn down the existing garage and built a new one in a better location on our lot 3 times, but I've also had a few career changes that put wrenches in those plans.
The existing garage barely has an 18'x20' foundation with a single 16' door. The interior floor only measures 17'x19. It has an 8' ceiling with a 3/12 pitch roof. It is absolutely the smallest "2-car" garage you can build. When we bought the house in March 2000, I completely rewired the house. 200A main breaker panel with all the lighting coming into a close-coupled sub-panel, a 90A sub-panel for the kitchen (house had a Jenn Air that needed a 60A circuit), and a 60A sub-panel out in the garage. I hung four 4' double T12 light fixtures in the garage then and had the provisions for an air compressor, welder, and heater. I picked up the air compressor in 2001. I added the heater in 2014. I still do not have my welder... yet. I had also pulled two runs of Cat5 and coax for cable out to the garage in 2000. It's nice to have a phone in the garage since it's 40' from the house. Now that it's 2017, the ethernet in the garage is unused if not a little dated, but in 2000, it was high tech!
Two years ago we put our house on the market and had a contingent offer in on another house. We had three "pre-approved" buyers fail to get qualified to buy our house before we lost our "new" house. At that point I was done. I decided we're staying put until we can move out of Indiana.
My wife asked about possibly building the least expensive new garage we could this fall and I said no. I decided I didn't want to invest too much money into a garage that would barely be an upgrade to what we have when we won't fully recover the investment in 2-3 years when we move out of state. In our neighborhood, a one car garage only drops the home value about $3K. Most of the houses in the neighborhood have one car garages and a larger two car garage adds no significant value over our existing garage. Tough decision to make, but financially it was the correct one to make.
We will recoup all the investment we make in landscaping, refinishing the basement, and replacing the old black iron water pipe with PEX... so that's the path I'm taking on this house... That way we can build the house and garage we want for our next house in our new state of residence.
So... with the background story done, here is how I've been killing my time with my small garage.
Over the last 17 years we have only had one of our daily drivers parked in the garage for maybe a total of 2 years. Most of the time, the garage was/is used as a big shed.
About 4 years ago (June 2013) my wife agreed that having a project car for my son, my dad, and me to work on could be fun. I found the car I loved and I had to clean out the garage to make room for it, so here are pics from back then:
And the car I hauled home? A '56 Ford Fairlane Victoria:
Subtitle 2: Putting lipstick on a pig.
I've lurked on GJ for years. We live in the city on a lot and a half. We bought the house in March 2000. We only planned to be here 5-7 years. Many of you know how that goes. During the last 17 years we have almost torn down the existing garage and built a new one in a better location on our lot 3 times, but I've also had a few career changes that put wrenches in those plans.
The existing garage barely has an 18'x20' foundation with a single 16' door. The interior floor only measures 17'x19. It has an 8' ceiling with a 3/12 pitch roof. It is absolutely the smallest "2-car" garage you can build. When we bought the house in March 2000, I completely rewired the house. 200A main breaker panel with all the lighting coming into a close-coupled sub-panel, a 90A sub-panel for the kitchen (house had a Jenn Air that needed a 60A circuit), and a 60A sub-panel out in the garage. I hung four 4' double T12 light fixtures in the garage then and had the provisions for an air compressor, welder, and heater. I picked up the air compressor in 2001. I added the heater in 2014. I still do not have my welder... yet. I had also pulled two runs of Cat5 and coax for cable out to the garage in 2000. It's nice to have a phone in the garage since it's 40' from the house. Now that it's 2017, the ethernet in the garage is unused if not a little dated, but in 2000, it was high tech!
Two years ago we put our house on the market and had a contingent offer in on another house. We had three "pre-approved" buyers fail to get qualified to buy our house before we lost our "new" house. At that point I was done. I decided we're staying put until we can move out of Indiana.
My wife asked about possibly building the least expensive new garage we could this fall and I said no. I decided I didn't want to invest too much money into a garage that would barely be an upgrade to what we have when we won't fully recover the investment in 2-3 years when we move out of state. In our neighborhood, a one car garage only drops the home value about $3K. Most of the houses in the neighborhood have one car garages and a larger two car garage adds no significant value over our existing garage. Tough decision to make, but financially it was the correct one to make.
We will recoup all the investment we make in landscaping, refinishing the basement, and replacing the old black iron water pipe with PEX... so that's the path I'm taking on this house... That way we can build the house and garage we want for our next house in our new state of residence.
So... with the background story done, here is how I've been killing my time with my small garage.
Over the last 17 years we have only had one of our daily drivers parked in the garage for maybe a total of 2 years. Most of the time, the garage was/is used as a big shed.
About 4 years ago (June 2013) my wife agreed that having a project car for my son, my dad, and me to work on could be fun. I found the car I loved and I had to clean out the garage to make room for it, so here are pics from back then:
And the car I hauled home? A '56 Ford Fairlane Victoria:
Last edited:




