I'm looking for some ideas, advise, suggestions on what to do with my 'new to me' garage. Please go easy as I'm new to this prospect of insulation but I'm handy enough with the tools to have a go at DIY and learn along the way!
I appreciate there is lots of information on this forum and i've read quite a lot of conflicting information as well, but hopefully some of you can point me in the right direction.
The garage is 20 years old, detached and a mixture of concrete walls and wood. The building itself is built into a slope, hence the use of concrete (and the support in the middle and back wall). To the right of the garage is a small workshop/storage room, which is separated by a stud wall and OSB, but is technically part of the overall building. Building is approx L28' x W36'
Climate: Canada, BC interior - temp range -30c to +25c (-22f to +77f). Tons of snow.
Heat source: At the moment a single baseboard electric heater, but will look at adding something better once I've got the place insulated.
Use: workshop, mechanics etc. I don't need it to be toasty warm in winter, but I'd like to make it more bearable in winter!
Ventilation: Soffit vents already installed in the roof over hangs and two good sized gable vents in the roof.
Vapour barrier: Install on the outer walls and roof/ceiling. Closest to the inside: Garage space (warm) - > OSB - > VB > Insulation > Outer wall -> Outside (cold) - Right?
Question 1: Do I need a vapour barrier on the internal wall between the workshop/storage and garage?
Question 2: Concrete walls. These surely let out a lot of heat, not sure what to do here? The back/rear wall just has OSB covering the concrete wall.
Question 3: Insulation type. The OSB is already in place. My plan is to paint it white eventually (Kilz->Latex paint). I'm thinking something like R12-14 in the walls and R30-R40 in the ceiling? But which type? Fiber or cellulose blow in? I still need to remove the OSB since I need a vapour barrier, so does blow in make sense?
Lastly, there is an open void in the ceiling at the moment, I will cover and enclose the roof space once insulated.
Pics:
(RED is the interior wall between the store room - GREEN pointing to the roof/attic space i need to close up after)
I appreciate there is lots of information on this forum and i've read quite a lot of conflicting information as well, but hopefully some of you can point me in the right direction.
The garage is 20 years old, detached and a mixture of concrete walls and wood. The building itself is built into a slope, hence the use of concrete (and the support in the middle and back wall). To the right of the garage is a small workshop/storage room, which is separated by a stud wall and OSB, but is technically part of the overall building. Building is approx L28' x W36'
Climate: Canada, BC interior - temp range -30c to +25c (-22f to +77f). Tons of snow.
Heat source: At the moment a single baseboard electric heater, but will look at adding something better once I've got the place insulated.
Use: workshop, mechanics etc. I don't need it to be toasty warm in winter, but I'd like to make it more bearable in winter!
Ventilation: Soffit vents already installed in the roof over hangs and two good sized gable vents in the roof.
Vapour barrier: Install on the outer walls and roof/ceiling. Closest to the inside: Garage space (warm) - > OSB - > VB > Insulation > Outer wall -> Outside (cold) - Right?
Question 1: Do I need a vapour barrier on the internal wall between the workshop/storage and garage?
Question 2: Concrete walls. These surely let out a lot of heat, not sure what to do here? The back/rear wall just has OSB covering the concrete wall.
Question 3: Insulation type. The OSB is already in place. My plan is to paint it white eventually (Kilz->Latex paint). I'm thinking something like R12-14 in the walls and R30-R40 in the ceiling? But which type? Fiber or cellulose blow in? I still need to remove the OSB since I need a vapour barrier, so does blow in make sense?
Lastly, there is an open void in the ceiling at the moment, I will cover and enclose the roof space once insulated.
Pics:
Last edited:

