workahol
Active member
We recently built ourselves a new house, and I have been spending my free hours over the past few months building out my new workshop. Compared to my old cramped garage workshop I have an embarrassment of floor space, since out my new house is attached to a 50'x40' airplane hangar. The hangar has a small workshop annex attached to it, which is what I'm showing here.
The air compressor and floor-standing drill press are just behind me in these photos, which is the back wall of the hangar. My plan for the bench-top power tools is to mount them on mobile bases so I can move them around the space as necessary.
I borrowed a lot of ideas from this forum for my workshop. The stationary L-shaped bench is 14' by 10', with three 44" HF cabinets built-in below. There's a 3 1/2" toe kick beneath the cabinets, which puts the top surface at around 39 3/4" off the floor. A little high for a bench, but comfortable for me personally. The surface is 3/4" ply over two-by construction, with poplar trim and a sacrificial surface of tempered hardboard. The left side will be for (probably) electronics work, and is also where I'll place my little Sherline tabletop mill and lathe. The right side has a Yost vise with extra support to give it a rigid mount.
The rolling bench is around 32"x60". It's a basic 2x4 frame supporting two layers of 3/4" birch ply laminated together, with maple trim around the perimeter. I used dual-locking casters from Rockler (picked up a bunch during a sale) which are very nice. I still need to apply a protective finish to the worktop to help with glue cleanup, but it's difficult because this thing is constantly in use. In fact the only bad thing about this bench is that I need to build another one, because it always seems to be covered with junk! The second one will be built at a height that allows it to be used as an outfeed for my table saw.
The shelves are cheap plywood trimmed with sticks of cheap hemlock to hide the ugly edges. I used metal shelf standards and brackets, which I probably wouldn't do again due to the expense and the frustrating variability in fit between individual brackets; it took a lot of swapping brackets around to get the shelves to hang level. I didn't want the shelves to sit proud of the wall, so I made a little router template and cut pockets in the rear face to allow them to fit around the supports.
Next: A second rolling bench, mobile bases for various power tools, a cabinet for small parts storage, and some kind of contraption to hold all this scrap wood I seem to be accumulating. Oh yeah, and eventually I need to get back to my "real" projects, but for now I'm having fun building a place to build other things in.







The air compressor and floor-standing drill press are just behind me in these photos, which is the back wall of the hangar. My plan for the bench-top power tools is to mount them on mobile bases so I can move them around the space as necessary.
I borrowed a lot of ideas from this forum for my workshop. The stationary L-shaped bench is 14' by 10', with three 44" HF cabinets built-in below. There's a 3 1/2" toe kick beneath the cabinets, which puts the top surface at around 39 3/4" off the floor. A little high for a bench, but comfortable for me personally. The surface is 3/4" ply over two-by construction, with poplar trim and a sacrificial surface of tempered hardboard. The left side will be for (probably) electronics work, and is also where I'll place my little Sherline tabletop mill and lathe. The right side has a Yost vise with extra support to give it a rigid mount.
The rolling bench is around 32"x60". It's a basic 2x4 frame supporting two layers of 3/4" birch ply laminated together, with maple trim around the perimeter. I used dual-locking casters from Rockler (picked up a bunch during a sale) which are very nice. I still need to apply a protective finish to the worktop to help with glue cleanup, but it's difficult because this thing is constantly in use. In fact the only bad thing about this bench is that I need to build another one, because it always seems to be covered with junk! The second one will be built at a height that allows it to be used as an outfeed for my table saw.
The shelves are cheap plywood trimmed with sticks of cheap hemlock to hide the ugly edges. I used metal shelf standards and brackets, which I probably wouldn't do again due to the expense and the frustrating variability in fit between individual brackets; it took a lot of swapping brackets around to get the shelves to hang level. I didn't want the shelves to sit proud of the wall, so I made a little router template and cut pockets in the rear face to allow them to fit around the supports.
Next: A second rolling bench, mobile bases for various power tools, a cabinet for small parts storage, and some kind of contraption to hold all this scrap wood I seem to be accumulating. Oh yeah, and eventually I need to get back to my "real" projects, but for now I'm having fun building a place to build other things in.



























I'm subscribing to this for sure. Looking forward to more updates, and thanks for posting. What state are you located if you don't mind saying?































