To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

My modest 2-car project

CLH

Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Gig Harbor, WA
Hi All - new-ish member here in Seattle.

I've been in garage and workshop space withdrawal since moving to the Seattle area from Atlanta eight years ago. Real estate prices and available space are quite crazy compared to Atlanta, and I left a house with almost 1000sqft of garage when we moved out here. We've been lucky enough to have a house with a decent two-car for the past five years, but due to the layout and the limits of outside parking I've not really been able to use it as a workshop (it always has to have room for both commuter vehicles). We've recently resolved that situation by buying a small house in Gig Harbor that will serve double duty as a weekend place for us and automotive workshop for me. The icing on the cake is that the neighborhood has included lawn maintenance, so I don't even have to mow or weed when I'm there!

The garage is a typical size at 19x19, but the only obstruction is the water heater and the ceiling is a full 10' high. As an added bonus it has extra storage on the side under the inside stairwell. The plan is to gradually turn it into a nice work area for my wrenching activities and to hold a project car that will be used for various motorsports activities (autocross, track days, etc.).

First on the list will be taking care of the floor (Epoxy-Coat kit on order), replacing the poorly constructed step leading into the house, and prepping the walls for a coat of paint. Once that's done I'll move on to lighting, storage and workbench. Longer term comes the air compressor and maybe (just maybe) a portable lift. That depends a lot on how thick the slab is.

Without further ado, some "before" pictures:


Simple view, before any cleaning other than a quick sweep-out:

Garage-03.jpg

After the first scrub-down to prep for epoxy:

Garage-07.jpg

The cubby under the inside stairs. This will get trimmed out to be more storage-friendly:

Garage-08.jpg

The crappy step the builder put in:

Garage-10.jpg

I'll keep posting as I make progress...I looking forward to sharing!

Cheers!

Chris
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

zkling

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2007
Messages
16,939
Looks good so far. Lots of potential. I really like that cubby thing that you have going on. I can really see some potential for that. Like possibly setting tool boxes / drawers / lista syle cabinets in there that way you maximize the ope floor space. The water heater placement kinda *****, but I think the cubby more than overcomes that.

:beer:
 

pepi

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 27, 2013
Messages
2,883
Location
Woodstock, GA
Hi All - new-ish member here in Seattle.

I've been in garage and workshop space withdrawal since moving to the Seattle area from Atlanta eight years ago. Real estate prices and available space are quite crazy compared to Atlanta, and I left a house with almost 1000sqft of garage when we moved out here.
Chris

Oh yeah Atlanta ROCKS in this respect !!! Fast drivers and good roads.
 
OP
C

CLH

Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Gig Harbor, WA
Got the first minor update done - replaced that crappy slapped-together garage step with a wider, deeper, and more secure one. Used Trex-like deck boards in a nice gray color to match the upcoming epoxy floor. It was a little tricky to get right as the floor is sloped back to front, meaning that the box is not uniform height right to left (taller on the left). It all worked out though. The new step is much more secure and very roomy :)

It's temporarily affixed to the ledger board on the wall side for the time being. When I get ready to epoxy I'll slide it out, and then permanently re-install it after the epoxy is fully cured.

What I started with - shallow, ugly and not very well installed:

Garage-12.jpg


A view of the new structure and how the treads are going down:

Garage-14.jpg


The finished product. After the epoxy is done I'll seal and paint the riser box:

Garage-17.jpg
 

55cadillacking

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 26, 2012
Messages
1,959
Location
Calgary
I love seeing what people are able to accomplish with a double garage. Subscribed!

Are you sure you don't want to hold off on the floor until the painting is done? Assuming, of course, a coat of paint is in the cards.
 
OP
C

CLH

Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Gig Harbor, WA
Normally I would do it the other way around, but timing constraints don't lend to that approach. On top of that I have a fantastic drywall and paint guy who I can trust to not make a mess of the new epoxy. I'll take some additional precautions anyway and put down some heavy paper before he comes in.

Cheers!
 

ODIS

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
2,110
Location
Pacific Northwest
Nice job, Chris. There are many car guys in the Gig Harbor area and some very well attended car shows there. Only guessing that you have found your way to the Tides Tavern.

Looking forward to seeing your floor progress and the transformation of your garage.

Ody.
 
OP
C

CLH

Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Gig Harbor, WA
Epoxy went down pretty easily, my only concern was that I didn't get four equal batches out of the Epoxy-Coat. It ended up working out OK, but I'm glad I didn't need four.

It's curing very glossy - much glossier that I've ever had with the regular Lowes/HD kits (e.g. Rustoleum or the like). Looks really good!

Garage-21.jpg


Garage-23.jpg
 

Jagmandave

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 6, 2011
Messages
6,303
Location
Overland Park, Ks.
Floor looks great!

I'm surprised where they put the water heater, I assume there's no basement?

In California they put the heater in it's own little closet, separated from the rest of the house and on an outside wall so it can be vented easily.

That looks like an awkward way to do it, both from the standpoint of it taking room in the garage and the way they had to run the vent pipe.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
OP
C

CLH

Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Gig Harbor, WA
Thanks for the comments guys!

Jagmandave - yeah, the WH placement isn't exactly ideal, but I can work with it. No basement for this house. It's pretty typical around here and even with houses that I've seen and owned in the Atlanta area as well (when there is no basement).

I plan to build in a utility sink on the far side of that WH, between it and the back wall. Perfect spot for it size-wise, assuming all of the plumbing can be made to work.

Cheers!
 

Dez

New member
Joined
May 24, 2012
Messages
1
Nice floor! Can you post more info on the epoxy (how much, where you got it, etc)? Thanks!
 

55cadillacking

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 26, 2012
Messages
1,959
Location
Calgary
One of the nicest epoxy applications ever. If your level of execution stays this high, your garage will be one to envy. Anything unique planned?
 
OP
C

CLH

Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Gig Harbor, WA
Thanks for the kind words...with epoxy it really comes down to the prep, and I try not to shortchange that step if I can avoid it.

Dez - I used standard Epoxy-Coat light gray, in the 500sqft kit you can order from Lowe's.

55cadillacking - nothing super unique, but lots left to do: utility sink, baseboards, wall paint, lighting, trim out the storage cubby, workbench, cabinets, compressor. And on top of that move the important stuff from the other house to here...tools, tool chests, press, tire trailer (for auto-x/track tires), and more. I'm just getting started!

Cheers!
 

marty_p

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 1, 2008
Messages
1,411
Location
SE LoUiSiAna
Chris, you are on fire! Your place is looking awesome, and I can't wait to see your progression.

We have great friends and a godchild that live on 107th St Ct NW in Gig Harbor. It's so nice to visit an area w/o much humidity. Next time we go, I'll trade you some beer for a tour! :beer:
 

snowboarda42

Member
Joined
Sep 5, 2011
Messages
20
Location
Starbucks, WA
Hey Chris, welcome to the area. I'm up in Mill Creek, just did the same exact kit on the floor of my new house. Turned out really glossy like yours and has help up well to a brake job so far.

Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 4 Beta
 

Attachments

  • uploadfromtaptalk1374642990895.jpg
    uploadfromtaptalk1374642990895.jpg
    123.7 KB · Views: 82
OP
C

CLH

Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Gig Harbor, WA
Hey Chris, welcome to the area. I'm up in Mill Creek, just did the same exact kit on the floor of my new house. Turned out really glossy like yours and has help up well to a brake job so far.

Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 4 Beta

That looks great...you skipped the flakes I see. We planned to skip the flakes but decided to use them at the last minute. I think with mine it helps blend the garage floor into the driveway, which has an exposed pebble finish.

Cheers!
 

FarmerPete

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 24, 2013
Messages
258
Location
Lansing, MI
If you need the space, you could always replace your water heater with one of the tankless heaters that are the big rage. You can justify the expense to the wife by telling her that you'll never run out of hot water again! Plus, Uncle Sam will cover a chunk of the cost with tax rebates. Since you'd have to redo some of the plumbing/venting anyways, you could possibly move the new unit to the corner to free up wall space. Just a thought.
 
OP
C

CLH

Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Gig Harbor, WA
If you need the space, you could always replace your water heater with one of the tankless heaters that are the big rage. You can justify the expense to the wife by telling her that you'll never run out of hot water again! Plus, Uncle Sam will cover a chunk of the cost with tax rebates. Since you'd have to redo some of the plumbing/venting anyways, you could possibly move the new unit to the corner to free up wall space. Just a thought.

Agreed, that would be a great approach and would free up a big chunk of space. For now I have other more exciting things to spend money on though :D
 
OP
C

CLH

Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Gig Harbor, WA
After two weeks of letting the epoxy cure and not having much time to spend on making more improvements, I finally got a few things accomplished today. Specifically, putting down some composite baseboard on the perimeter. It's not caulked or painted yet, but that's coming. Just putting down the plain white composite trim gives it a more finished look. Slow but steady...

Before, right side:
Garage-25.jpg

Before, left side by main door:
Garage-26.jpg

After, right side with boxed in bump-out for the breaker box. I put in access panels above and below the box but still need to decide on the final wiring plan:
Garage-28.jpg

The trim looking much better by the main door:
Garage-31.jpg

Next step, gray caulk and gray paint to make the trim match the floor (the walls will be a very light off-white shade for best light reflectivity).

I've been thinking about the water heater area and the wife had a good idea - a closet! I'm now considering boxing this all in with a full-height closet. That would provide some inside storage space as well, and may turn out to be a good location to put a stand-up compressor. That would put the compressor out of the way and cut down on the noise of it a bit.

This would all get boxed in starting just to the right of the light switch. Any reason to not do it?
Garage-32.jpg
 
OP
C

CLH

Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Gig Harbor, WA
A little more progress today, trimming out the cubby on the house side of the garage so that I can have everything ready for the drywall and paint guy. I decided to use bargain basement laminate from my friendly neighborhood home improvement store as the "floor". I plan to use this area for general storage and it may end up with stuff like autocross/track tires, track toolbox, etc., so it needed to be durable. On top of that, the access to the crawl space is in this cubby, so I had to make a "hatch" in the floor of it. That's not fully finished yet, but all it needs is to have the laminate permanently affixed to the OSB panel that was covering it up.

Before:

Garage-33.jpg

After:

Garage-34.jpg

Looking forward to caulk and paint :)

Tomorrow I'll hang up the first additional lighting - a four-bulb T8 fixture that will come off of the existing ceiling box to get a little more light over where the engine bay area will be.

Cheers! :beer:
 
OP
C

CLH

Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
24
Location
Gig Harbor, WA
Garage is finally painted. I've very pleased at how the walls, floor and gray trim look together. Turned out really well!

Garage-35.jpg

Now on to lighting, workbench and storage!

Cheers!
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom