Mr_C
Active member
I am in the middle of a shop build and just discovered this site. Some of the work is complete, but as I get into the details of finishing the shop, I am excited to get some feedback from the group. I have been reading the archives and have learned a lot already.
I am a car guy and live in MN so I only get to drive my old cars in the summer. I live on a hobby farm with many outbuildings (30x40 barn, 48x72 pole barn, 42x90 pole barn, plus smaller stuff) but haven't had anything heated so I could work on stuff when the weather was bad, and drive it when the weather was good.
After much debating, I decided to partition off part of my 42x90 pole barn and pour a floor and insulate it to make it a shop. I picked that shed because it is only a few years old and is in by far the best shape, and is where I store most of my stuff (I rent space to friends in other sheds). I didn't do the whole shed because of expense, cost in heating the whole area, and I am doing 90% of the work myself, so it would take too long.
Below is the basic plan at full occupancy. I don't plan on having that much stuff in there, but wanted to plan for it. The lower part of the pick is the front door and cold storage (with cars parked in as they currently are for winter storage). The upper part is the new heated shop. I didn't add additional doors to access the shop area from the back side because the adjacent buildings and landscape prevent it.
The truck in the upper part of the pic is sitting where the 2 post hoist will be. The paint booth will come later (but I am making sure I have the space for it), and will be more for having a separate area to sand and prime than serious painting. It will have a bi-fold door on the side, which isn't ideal, but it won't be a high traffic area. The overall layout is to have space for a long term project or 2 (to the left) while still having room to use the hoist and do light work in the center. The right will be used for warm storage until I get the paint booth built.
I built the Morton building in 2009, and it had a dirt floor. First step was concrete, so I dug out 12" of dirt, put in 4" of sand, packed and leveled it, added 2" of insulation and then a 6" concrete slab. The slab has rebar and microfiber, heat pipe and additional rebar below the hoist. 4" of insulation separate the slab from the outside walls.
This is as I was digging out the floor-
Here is one of the few pics I have of the front of the building, and 2 of 4 loads of sand (and my insulation for under the concrete in the background).
Insulation and rebar-
Pex laid out and ready to pour (area without pex towards the back is for the hoist and floor drains, so no heat there-
Getting ready to pour (the only part I have paid someone else to do so far)
It was getting cold by this time (November) so I covered the concrete with plastic and 2" of pink insulation and let it sit and cure for 3 weeks.
I then built a wood divider wall to separate the cold and warm halves. I haven't built a door for it yet (it will be a wood slider that slides to the right and have a walk through door in it) so I am temporarily using a large tarp.
I then pulled the insulation off the floor, and used it on the walls. I had considered spray in foam, but it was spendy and they couldn't spray in the cold here anyway.
I am currently working on the ceiling. I am putting up a plastic barrier first, that should at least hold the heat in. I will then put up tin and blow in insulation. I got most of the plastic up yesterday.
Used some boards on the scaffolding to hold up the plastic (I put it all up by myself so I didn't have any extra hands)
I have limited time to work on this (these pics happened over the course of the last 5 months) but I will have more time this weekend. I am not sure if I am going to try to tackle the tin ceiling or the door this weekend. Right now I am leaning towards the door, as the tarp isn't doing a lot to keep the cold out, and this winter we have been getting a lot of cold.
I am a car guy and live in MN so I only get to drive my old cars in the summer. I live on a hobby farm with many outbuildings (30x40 barn, 48x72 pole barn, 42x90 pole barn, plus smaller stuff) but haven't had anything heated so I could work on stuff when the weather was bad, and drive it when the weather was good.
After much debating, I decided to partition off part of my 42x90 pole barn and pour a floor and insulate it to make it a shop. I picked that shed because it is only a few years old and is in by far the best shape, and is where I store most of my stuff (I rent space to friends in other sheds). I didn't do the whole shed because of expense, cost in heating the whole area, and I am doing 90% of the work myself, so it would take too long.
Below is the basic plan at full occupancy. I don't plan on having that much stuff in there, but wanted to plan for it. The lower part of the pick is the front door and cold storage (with cars parked in as they currently are for winter storage). The upper part is the new heated shop. I didn't add additional doors to access the shop area from the back side because the adjacent buildings and landscape prevent it.
The truck in the upper part of the pic is sitting where the 2 post hoist will be. The paint booth will come later (but I am making sure I have the space for it), and will be more for having a separate area to sand and prime than serious painting. It will have a bi-fold door on the side, which isn't ideal, but it won't be a high traffic area. The overall layout is to have space for a long term project or 2 (to the left) while still having room to use the hoist and do light work in the center. The right will be used for warm storage until I get the paint booth built.
I built the Morton building in 2009, and it had a dirt floor. First step was concrete, so I dug out 12" of dirt, put in 4" of sand, packed and leveled it, added 2" of insulation and then a 6" concrete slab. The slab has rebar and microfiber, heat pipe and additional rebar below the hoist. 4" of insulation separate the slab from the outside walls.
This is as I was digging out the floor-
Here is one of the few pics I have of the front of the building, and 2 of 4 loads of sand (and my insulation for under the concrete in the background).
Insulation and rebar-
Pex laid out and ready to pour (area without pex towards the back is for the hoist and floor drains, so no heat there-
Getting ready to pour (the only part I have paid someone else to do so far)
It was getting cold by this time (November) so I covered the concrete with plastic and 2" of pink insulation and let it sit and cure for 3 weeks.
I then built a wood divider wall to separate the cold and warm halves. I haven't built a door for it yet (it will be a wood slider that slides to the right and have a walk through door in it) so I am temporarily using a large tarp.
I then pulled the insulation off the floor, and used it on the walls. I had considered spray in foam, but it was spendy and they couldn't spray in the cold here anyway.
I am currently working on the ceiling. I am putting up a plastic barrier first, that should at least hold the heat in. I will then put up tin and blow in insulation. I got most of the plastic up yesterday.
Used some boards on the scaffolding to hold up the plastic (I put it all up by myself so I didn't have any extra hands)
I have limited time to work on this (these pics happened over the course of the last 5 months) but I will have more time this weekend. I am not sure if I am going to try to tackle the tin ceiling or the door this weekend. Right now I am leaning towards the door, as the tarp isn't doing a lot to keep the cold out, and this winter we have been getting a lot of cold.