jlckmj
Well-known member
I have been asked to share my soffit cabinet build, so here goes.
I wanted my cabinets enclosed to eliminate dust and dirt from getting on the contents. I got tired of cleaning things as I took them down from my last garage.
I started by building the dividers for the cabinet, they are almost 4 foot high on the long side, and 2 ft. deep, made out of 11/16 plywood. I used 2x2's on the bottom for shelves, the backside for mounting into the wall, and top for mounting to the ceiling. As you can see, I ran most of my electric inside the cabinets staples to the walls, leaving extra wire. I put the romex into conduit and then dropped the conduit down from the cabinets, so I have some flexibility with where the box ends up.

I mounted the dividers to the wall studs, and ceiling truss's with 5 in. 5/16th lag bolts.

I then used a dado blade to hog out a 3/4 inch wide by 1/2 in deep slot on the edge of a 2x4 for the doors to slide in. On the top 2x4 I hogged out about 7/8ths in so I could slip the door panels up and into it and then swing the doors into the bottom dado.

Once the top and bottom 2x4 rails were mounted to the front of the dividers by screwing into the 2x2's, I started mounting 2x2's onto the wall, and 1x2's onto the backside of the rail for the bottom shelf to sit on.

With the bottom shelves installed, I placed the doors into the tracks that I made in the 2x4's. I used 1/4 in melamine for the doors, they slide decent enough in the grooves, seem to be sturdy enough to keep from bending and warping, and they reflect a lot of light.

Once that was done we painted the bottom rail and bottom side of the cabinets the same color as the wall. I will paint the top rail white to match the ceiling the next time I have the white paint out.
All in all, the cabinets are very strong, I hung from the bottom rail after they were all screwed together, and I am pushing 300 lbs. I don't anticipate putting that much weight in them as the bottom is already about 7 foot off the floor.

Just a little different twist on something numerous people on this site have done.
Jim
I wanted my cabinets enclosed to eliminate dust and dirt from getting on the contents. I got tired of cleaning things as I took them down from my last garage.
I started by building the dividers for the cabinet, they are almost 4 foot high on the long side, and 2 ft. deep, made out of 11/16 plywood. I used 2x2's on the bottom for shelves, the backside for mounting into the wall, and top for mounting to the ceiling. As you can see, I ran most of my electric inside the cabinets staples to the walls, leaving extra wire. I put the romex into conduit and then dropped the conduit down from the cabinets, so I have some flexibility with where the box ends up.

I mounted the dividers to the wall studs, and ceiling truss's with 5 in. 5/16th lag bolts.

I then used a dado blade to hog out a 3/4 inch wide by 1/2 in deep slot on the edge of a 2x4 for the doors to slide in. On the top 2x4 I hogged out about 7/8ths in so I could slip the door panels up and into it and then swing the doors into the bottom dado.

Once the top and bottom 2x4 rails were mounted to the front of the dividers by screwing into the 2x2's, I started mounting 2x2's onto the wall, and 1x2's onto the backside of the rail for the bottom shelf to sit on.

With the bottom shelves installed, I placed the doors into the tracks that I made in the 2x4's. I used 1/4 in melamine for the doors, they slide decent enough in the grooves, seem to be sturdy enough to keep from bending and warping, and they reflect a lot of light.

Once that was done we painted the bottom rail and bottom side of the cabinets the same color as the wall. I will paint the top rail white to match the ceiling the next time I have the white paint out.
All in all, the cabinets are very strong, I hung from the bottom rail after they were all screwed together, and I am pushing 300 lbs. I don't anticipate putting that much weight in them as the bottom is already about 7 foot off the floor.

Just a little different twist on something numerous people on this site have done.
Jim
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