Honch
Well-known member
Like many I have been lurking here for a long time. My previous garage was a nice three car in AZ, but nothing particularly photo worthy. After two years I had finally accomplished all the air lines, storage, shelving and lighting to make it a place I could work my projects from. Then we moved and it starts all over again.
Last August this was the start of my new garage. I was limited by lot size and the prefab builder to a standard bay third stall but was able to extend the main two bays by four feet. The fit was so tight on the lot we had to get an exemption for the brick being 1" over the minimum distance to the property line.


13 weeks later the home and garage are finished. I also had insulated doors installed in addition to the garage being insulated and finished, it currently is not heated but has the gas line run.


Between the move, work and the winter my new garage ended up looking like this.


Last month I decided with it getting warmer it was time to get my garage back in operation. Before getting everything in place I wanted to get some paint on the walls. I found with my previous two garages that in a working garage white walls don't last long from 3 feet down. Water splash, grinding, welding all take their toll on the white so I chose to do gray lower with a blue accent stripe.


Lesson learned, I should have painted over the existing white paint, it was poorly applied and was a poor base to tape to, pulling up frequently along the tape line. Fixing the areas took much longer than it would have to just paint it properly to begin with.

With just the blue and gray the wall was much more bland than I wanted. The wife unit suggested I add a red pinstripe on each side of the blue.

Over the last two weekends I started setting up my Lista cabinets, these were a $220.00 CL score from Phoenix. I purchased them from a guy that liquidated buildings for a living and they were too tall for the ceiling in his garage. Unfortunately I was not present when the items were moved from my previous home and the movers completely disassembled the cabinets losing much of the hardware in the process. I spent a good portion of one day making the square captured nuts that are used throughout the cabinets.

As you can see they totally dwarf the 60 gallon compressor in the corner. Next on my list is to run the 220 to the compressor and pipe the airlines.

Last August this was the start of my new garage. I was limited by lot size and the prefab builder to a standard bay third stall but was able to extend the main two bays by four feet. The fit was so tight on the lot we had to get an exemption for the brick being 1" over the minimum distance to the property line.


13 weeks later the home and garage are finished. I also had insulated doors installed in addition to the garage being insulated and finished, it currently is not heated but has the gas line run.


Between the move, work and the winter my new garage ended up looking like this.


Last month I decided with it getting warmer it was time to get my garage back in operation. Before getting everything in place I wanted to get some paint on the walls. I found with my previous two garages that in a working garage white walls don't last long from 3 feet down. Water splash, grinding, welding all take their toll on the white so I chose to do gray lower with a blue accent stripe.


Lesson learned, I should have painted over the existing white paint, it was poorly applied and was a poor base to tape to, pulling up frequently along the tape line. Fixing the areas took much longer than it would have to just paint it properly to begin with.

With just the blue and gray the wall was much more bland than I wanted. The wife unit suggested I add a red pinstripe on each side of the blue.

Over the last two weekends I started setting up my Lista cabinets, these were a $220.00 CL score from Phoenix. I purchased them from a guy that liquidated buildings for a living and they were too tall for the ceiling in his garage. Unfortunately I was not present when the items were moved from my previous home and the movers completely disassembled the cabinets losing much of the hardware in the process. I spent a good portion of one day making the square captured nuts that are used throughout the cabinets.

As you can see they totally dwarf the 60 gallon compressor in the corner. Next on my list is to run the 220 to the compressor and pipe the airlines.

Last edited:
You deserve a YOU **** for the Lista cabinet score!!!! Those look great in there.







































