Ken P
Well-known member
OK, I've been daydreaming, or brainstorming, whichever and thought I'd ask some questions and get opinions.
When I finally do get to build my garage(s) what is the general opinion of the best set up?
I could build one huge garage with everything under one roof. I would partition off the different areas by work that will be performed. This sounds OK but I would have to separate the different HVAC requirements, some heated and cooled others not, as well as electrical and plumbing requirements. Also on site preparation I would need an area large enough and graded out flat to support the building and various driveways, parking, and storage of my finished running and driving vehicles.
Since flat land in my part of Georgia is very hard to find, and usually very costly if you do find a decent site, would it be better to build smaller separate buildings by work to be performed?
I figure I would need 5 buildings of various sizes :
1) Finished, clean, showcar storage only. I figure this would require a very durable structure. Maybe poured walls, steel roof / I beams, a single theft proof roll up and side door? It would need only electrical for lights, dehumidifier, and a very basic air filtration system which could be a stand alone floor unit in a corner. Also water for a fire sprinkler system.
2) A final assembly area where the major bulk of my tools would be along with a mobile four post drive on lift. Also the work benches and prepped finished parts storage. This area would have all the bells and whistles. Of course heat and air, bathroom, stereo / TV, a lounge area with fold out sofa bed & chairs area carpet, refrig., computer, office files and desk etc.
3) A painting and detailing area. This would be a paint room with ventilation / filtering, air compressor ( outside ) with spraying equipment storage, wet sanding as well as a car washing area. This would require all the electricals to support it as well a non heated water supply.
4) A deconstruction area. This would be a "dirty" area for blasting, welding, metal cutting, prelimary cleaning. Also a fixed 2 post lift for body / frame separation, drivetrain removal, and heavy lifting.
5) A flammable / hazardous materials storage area. This is where I would keep all paints, cleaners, fuels, oils ( new and used ), solvents, etc. This would need to be heated at a minimum I guess as well as fireproofed all metal construction.
I'm thinking of renting / loaning some of the facilities to friends who paint and do some resto work on their own. This could be either for cash or their services on my projects. I understand I would need to look into zoning and property building requirements before taking on something like this.
Does this sound like too much? I'm currently in a forced ( layed off ) early retirement situation but will eventually go back to work at least part time. This would be for no other reason but to get health insurance and some money coming in on a regular basis. I've already had my "career" and would like to do something I enjoy for a change.
Ideas, opinions, or concerns? Let me have it...
When I finally do get to build my garage(s) what is the general opinion of the best set up?
I could build one huge garage with everything under one roof. I would partition off the different areas by work that will be performed. This sounds OK but I would have to separate the different HVAC requirements, some heated and cooled others not, as well as electrical and plumbing requirements. Also on site preparation I would need an area large enough and graded out flat to support the building and various driveways, parking, and storage of my finished running and driving vehicles.
Since flat land in my part of Georgia is very hard to find, and usually very costly if you do find a decent site, would it be better to build smaller separate buildings by work to be performed?
I figure I would need 5 buildings of various sizes :
1) Finished, clean, showcar storage only. I figure this would require a very durable structure. Maybe poured walls, steel roof / I beams, a single theft proof roll up and side door? It would need only electrical for lights, dehumidifier, and a very basic air filtration system which could be a stand alone floor unit in a corner. Also water for a fire sprinkler system.
2) A final assembly area where the major bulk of my tools would be along with a mobile four post drive on lift. Also the work benches and prepped finished parts storage. This area would have all the bells and whistles. Of course heat and air, bathroom, stereo / TV, a lounge area with fold out sofa bed & chairs area carpet, refrig., computer, office files and desk etc.
3) A painting and detailing area. This would be a paint room with ventilation / filtering, air compressor ( outside ) with spraying equipment storage, wet sanding as well as a car washing area. This would require all the electricals to support it as well a non heated water supply.
4) A deconstruction area. This would be a "dirty" area for blasting, welding, metal cutting, prelimary cleaning. Also a fixed 2 post lift for body / frame separation, drivetrain removal, and heavy lifting.
5) A flammable / hazardous materials storage area. This is where I would keep all paints, cleaners, fuels, oils ( new and used ), solvents, etc. This would need to be heated at a minimum I guess as well as fireproofed all metal construction.
I'm thinking of renting / loaning some of the facilities to friends who paint and do some resto work on their own. This could be either for cash or their services on my projects. I understand I would need to look into zoning and property building requirements before taking on something like this.
Does this sound like too much? I'm currently in a forced ( layed off ) early retirement situation but will eventually go back to work at least part time. This would be for no other reason but to get health insurance and some money coming in on a regular basis. I've already had my "career" and would like to do something I enjoy for a change.
Ideas, opinions, or concerns? Let me have it...


