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Preparing a Garage for Storage.

mpire

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Nov 21, 2008
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Location
Florida
Two things I am primarily concerned with are Mold and Bugs while storing a long term car project that I just don't have time to work on but I can't let go of just yet.

Here is the garage I started with:

g7.jpg


Its a small garage that is 12' x 20'.

One man door, one un-insulated garage door.

One outlet, one light, but I just replaced the outlet, switch, and fixture.

The man door was just replaced, and the garage door is a standard uninstalled door I installed a decade ago.

There is conditioned space above, behind, and to the right of the garage, but the left wall and garage door are concrete block and have no insulation.

Overall the garage stays relatively cool in Florida heat even though it has no ventilation or air flow.

The first thing I did was to pressure wash the walls, ceiling, and floor. It was previously painted a couple times, its peeling up and it looks terrible and dirty.

I went over the garage and filled all the holes with putty, the ceiling was full of them, I also crawled around the floor and caulked all the gaps in the concrete by the walls. That took 10 tubes of caulking, so the slab has settled a lot in 45 years.

Then I covered up the floor and sprayed everything with Kilz latex primer.

kilz2-latex-292x292.png


There are a couple places that I will have to go back and hit with a roller to put on another coat. Some of the places were the paint had peeled off the drywall are yellowing.

g9.jpg


I even sprayed the ceiling, which went much smoother than I anticipated.

g5.jpg


Then I pulled off the masking and added another 2 tubes of calk to the gaps to even it out.

Then I threw down a can of oil based paint on the floor. I didn't think latex would stick and it appears to have oil based paint already.

g11.jpg


Then I touched up the edges again and a few spots, the coverage on the floor isn't the greatest, so I may put down another coat of paint because I can't help myself.

g1.jpg


The exterior walls are heavy stucco over block. I assume that they were open air before they got closed in at some point.

g10.jpg


I have lots of water issues on the right side drywall that I am trying to work around, I will put down a plastic baseboard and caulk it to the floor, or maybe I have enough of that vinyl trim leftover from my house garage.

So the concerns are to make sure it stays dry, I have had mold issues before on stuff that was stored unattended for years. Its just damp in there I guess, so I have ordered a 30 pint B&D dehumidifier.

g12.jpg


Lets hope it can keep the humidity down, I am going to run a line out under the garage door and just let it weep.

I am not sure if its big enough, but if the space isn't accessed very often, I am hoping it will do the job. Any ideas?

Also, I have had some roach and plaster bagworms in the garage before. I am hoping to minimize bugs if possible, and I know bagworms love the humidity. They turn into moths that eat clothes and probably cardboard so I don't want them anywhere near my stuff.

No hope on getting a good seal on the garage door, and I'm not sure its even possible. I did replace the rubber strip on the bottom.

Any boxes will be stacked on top of half inch styrofoam so its not touching the concrete, hopefully this will cut down on moisture transfer.

Do you have any recommendations on bugs other than spraying?

I am going to be storing a project car that I just don't have time to work on lately, and hopefully will get back to it soon. I am concerned with the interior degrading, so any suggestions to protect it long term are welcome.
 
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mpire

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https://www.carbag.com/carjacket/

Because if you can't get a good seal on the garage door bugs will get in. As will weather water etc.

As close to zero sunlight as possible.

That's actually not a bad idea and its not too expensive either. The car is without subframes so I roll it around on a wooden buck at the moment. No front clip, so I wonder if I could get away with the smallest one.
 

niget2002

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Oct 2, 2012
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11,123
Location
Josephine, TX
I put a ceiling fan in my garage. I noticed just having the moving air helps keep mold and other stuff from growing.
 
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mpire

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This is at a condo complex half an hour away from home, I won't be able to check on it regularly.

I am looking at ways to make it worry free.
 
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jimreed2160

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Aug 7, 2016
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Location
Tallahassee FL
I have had a dehumidifier in my garage for years. It has a pump and a long hose and that system has worked great with NO attention. I am in north Florida and am bothered by skinks and palmetto bugs. Suggest you put down some of those sticky traps. They have worked well for me.
 
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jwh

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Aug 10, 2005
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774
Location
Rochester NY
I second the idea for a pump. I have dehumidifier in my basement - was filling up like once a day, I was only making it down there a couple times a week. Wonder how I got along without it.

John
 
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mpire

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Location
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The dehumidifier has a nozzle and a hose that I can just run outside. I shouldn't need a pump to pressurize it should I?
 

jwh

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Aug 10, 2005
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Location
Rochester NY
If you can find a place for a hose drain, great. The way mine works is the dehumidifier hose empties into the pump. (Both are on the floor). When the pumps chamber gets full, it pumps the water into the laundry tub. Sort of like a mini-sump pump set up.

John
 

kbs2244

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Nov 11, 2006
Messages
14,065
dehumidifier and ceiling fan both 24/7/365
Put the dehumidifier up and a set of cinder blocks to get a good slope on the drain hose.
 

Mguilicutty

Member
Joined
Jun 28, 2018
Messages
23
Location
Kansas City
Keep all cardboard out of the space. If you must store stuff in there with the car, use plastic bins or something. Cardboard is food for critters.
 
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