ckucia
Well-known member
Little background...
We lived in NE OH for several decades. Had a small two car detached that served as a workshop. Thanks to this site, I was able to make the most of the small space.
I got a job in rural WV 3 years ago. Moved to a small cabin with no outside buildings and no storage space. Got rid of a lot, but managed to keep a good amount of tools by putting them in bins and renting a storage unit. I've been maintaining the vehicles as best I can outside on a gravel driveway. It's not been fun.
Fast forward to today. We found a new house we're in the process of buying. It has a detached garage that's about 32x64 with a barn (gambrel) roof and a second story with almost as much footprint as the first. Assuming it goes through, I'm going to have more space than I know what to do with (at first). Closing probably won't happen until sometime in February, and the house needs a few things done to it, but I'm looking at having a great building sometime in March.
So on to my question...
We have two cars and a tractor that are going to have to live in the first story. I'm contemplating the possibility of a lean-to addition in front to try and get the cars out of the main garage area, but the tractor will still have to live in there. There are two garage doors on the long wall, offset slightly for a stairwell to the second story. Under the stairwell are two well accumulator tanks, and a fuse panel.
I maintain our vehicles and the tractor. Most of the work I do will be mechanical/automotive. The house is basically done, but I can see doing the occasional woodworking project or building a small structure.
What I'm thinking of doing is putting a shallow workbench the entire long wall of the first floor with cabinets above and below and make that the "dirty work" area. Since that's where the cars are, I figure I can move stuff right from the car to the bench and back for repairs. Ditto the tractor.
If I need to do woodworking or painting, I'll pull the cars and tractor out as necessary to free up the space. Probably build some sort of plastic "curtain" that will drop down to close off the bench area from sawdust or paint spray and maybe do something similar between garage bays.
The second story would then be for "clean work" and storage. The roof is trussed but leaves a square box area that I could wall off. Between the roof and the long walls is potentially a lot of storage space. I figure I can do things like electronics repair, finish work, assembly work (engines, transmission) up there and it will be easier to heat/cool once I've insulated it and walled in the studs. Would also eventually like to try upholstery work so that would be an upstairs activity.
That all sounds good, except for getting things between the stories. Specifically, I'm thinking engines/transmissions that I would really like to assemble in a clean, conditioned area. Not a problem (generally) hauling the pieces up the stairs, but once the whole thing is assembled, I'll need to get it back to the first story to install.
So I'm looking for ideas that have worked. Thinking of maybe a trap door with a winch of some sort and a platform I can raise and lower. Maybe building an addition just for that purpose that serves as an "elevator shaft" between the two floors but doesn't take up any floor space.
I don't see this happening a lot so maybe just a chainfall is sufficient rather than some sort of powered device?
I tend to work on modern engines/transmissions which are usually aluminum, but I wouldn't rule out some old school stuff down the road and those are typically heavier. Might want to get a rear end upstairs and back down too.
Anyone have a similar problem? How'd you solve it?
We lived in NE OH for several decades. Had a small two car detached that served as a workshop. Thanks to this site, I was able to make the most of the small space.
I got a job in rural WV 3 years ago. Moved to a small cabin with no outside buildings and no storage space. Got rid of a lot, but managed to keep a good amount of tools by putting them in bins and renting a storage unit. I've been maintaining the vehicles as best I can outside on a gravel driveway. It's not been fun.
Fast forward to today. We found a new house we're in the process of buying. It has a detached garage that's about 32x64 with a barn (gambrel) roof and a second story with almost as much footprint as the first. Assuming it goes through, I'm going to have more space than I know what to do with (at first). Closing probably won't happen until sometime in February, and the house needs a few things done to it, but I'm looking at having a great building sometime in March.
So on to my question...
We have two cars and a tractor that are going to have to live in the first story. I'm contemplating the possibility of a lean-to addition in front to try and get the cars out of the main garage area, but the tractor will still have to live in there. There are two garage doors on the long wall, offset slightly for a stairwell to the second story. Under the stairwell are two well accumulator tanks, and a fuse panel.
I maintain our vehicles and the tractor. Most of the work I do will be mechanical/automotive. The house is basically done, but I can see doing the occasional woodworking project or building a small structure.
What I'm thinking of doing is putting a shallow workbench the entire long wall of the first floor with cabinets above and below and make that the "dirty work" area. Since that's where the cars are, I figure I can move stuff right from the car to the bench and back for repairs. Ditto the tractor.
If I need to do woodworking or painting, I'll pull the cars and tractor out as necessary to free up the space. Probably build some sort of plastic "curtain" that will drop down to close off the bench area from sawdust or paint spray and maybe do something similar between garage bays.
The second story would then be for "clean work" and storage. The roof is trussed but leaves a square box area that I could wall off. Between the roof and the long walls is potentially a lot of storage space. I figure I can do things like electronics repair, finish work, assembly work (engines, transmission) up there and it will be easier to heat/cool once I've insulated it and walled in the studs. Would also eventually like to try upholstery work so that would be an upstairs activity.
That all sounds good, except for getting things between the stories. Specifically, I'm thinking engines/transmissions that I would really like to assemble in a clean, conditioned area. Not a problem (generally) hauling the pieces up the stairs, but once the whole thing is assembled, I'll need to get it back to the first story to install.
So I'm looking for ideas that have worked. Thinking of maybe a trap door with a winch of some sort and a platform I can raise and lower. Maybe building an addition just for that purpose that serves as an "elevator shaft" between the two floors but doesn't take up any floor space.
I don't see this happening a lot so maybe just a chainfall is sufficient rather than some sort of powered device?
I tend to work on modern engines/transmissions which are usually aluminum, but I wouldn't rule out some old school stuff down the road and those are typically heavier. Might want to get a rear end upstairs and back down too.
Anyone have a similar problem? How'd you solve it?

