Mr. Roboto
Well-known member
Mr. Roboto's Garage Makeover
I purchased my first home in July of 2012. I looked for almost a year before finding one with a garage that I could get excited about, until I found the house that I purchased. The house was built in 1992, and the garage was built in 2006 - it is 26' x 34' with approximately 10.5 foot ceilings. It was a blank slate, no walls, no insulation, no ceiling - everything was exposed. I had so many big plans for the garage, however, I had to focus most of my efforts inside the house before I could think about getting to the garage. Here we are - 3 years later - and I am finally going to begin my garage transformation. I think it's about time to start a thread to track my progress as I go. I don't have many pictures for what little I have done up until this point, but there really isn't much to show. It will (hopefully) start to get exciting from here on out.
Here is an overview shot of the house (excuse the paper taped up on my garage, this was taken the day I had my driveway sealed)
And here is what the garage looked like shortly after I moved in. Like I said - blank slate.
Over the next 3 years, the only real thing I did was to build myself a workbench, put insulation up on the walls, and acquired a bunch of varios storage cabinets and the like.
Now, fast forward to phase 2. I am going to be finalizing my electrical layout, hanging drywall on the ceiling and walls, doing blown in insulation in the "attic" and hopefully get a heating unit out there. Hoping to accomplish this before the winter hits.
I chipped away at all the furring strips a little after work each night last week. Escuse the lighting - I had to take all my light fixtures down to do this.
Sheetrock was delivered this Friday evening, I spend Saturday running my electrical, and sunday hanging sheetrock on the ceiling. The ceiling was slow going, because I was doing it by myself with a drywall hoist. I've never done sheetrock before, so there was a bit of a learning curve.
And that's how it currently sits. Hoping to have a friend come over next weekend to help me out hanging more sheetrock. It should speed up the process quite a bit.
I purchased my first home in July of 2012. I looked for almost a year before finding one with a garage that I could get excited about, until I found the house that I purchased. The house was built in 1992, and the garage was built in 2006 - it is 26' x 34' with approximately 10.5 foot ceilings. It was a blank slate, no walls, no insulation, no ceiling - everything was exposed. I had so many big plans for the garage, however, I had to focus most of my efforts inside the house before I could think about getting to the garage. Here we are - 3 years later - and I am finally going to begin my garage transformation. I think it's about time to start a thread to track my progress as I go. I don't have many pictures for what little I have done up until this point, but there really isn't much to show. It will (hopefully) start to get exciting from here on out.
Here is an overview shot of the house (excuse the paper taped up on my garage, this was taken the day I had my driveway sealed)
And here is what the garage looked like shortly after I moved in. Like I said - blank slate.
Over the next 3 years, the only real thing I did was to build myself a workbench, put insulation up on the walls, and acquired a bunch of varios storage cabinets and the like.
Now, fast forward to phase 2. I am going to be finalizing my electrical layout, hanging drywall on the ceiling and walls, doing blown in insulation in the "attic" and hopefully get a heating unit out there. Hoping to accomplish this before the winter hits.
I chipped away at all the furring strips a little after work each night last week. Escuse the lighting - I had to take all my light fixtures down to do this.
Sheetrock was delivered this Friday evening, I spend Saturday running my electrical, and sunday hanging sheetrock on the ceiling. The ceiling was slow going, because I was doing it by myself with a drywall hoist. I've never done sheetrock before, so there was a bit of a learning curve.
And that's how it currently sits. Hoping to have a friend come over next weekend to help me out hanging more sheetrock. It should speed up the process quite a bit.
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