To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Above 1200 Sq/FT T.h.e...e…x….p…..a……n…….s……..i………o……….n

Wokspaces above 1200 squarefeet.
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
I think the garage size in relation to the house is juuust right. :thumbup: :bounce:

I think it looks good as well! :thumbup:

This was actually my number one fear with the whole build. Would it be too big (look too big) next to the house? Some people have some huuuge pole barns right next to their houses, and I have always thought this looked a little tacky, especially if the architecture didnt match (steel building next to brick house, for instance).


.
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
After the trusses were set, they moved onto sheathing some of the roof :headscrat. And then some framing for the East end dormer. They ran out of underlayment, so they got a little more, plus some 2-by's for the dormer framing and roof framing.

attachment.php



attachment.php



.
 

Attachments

  • GOPR6054.jpg
    GOPR6054.jpg
    150.6 KB · Views: 1,825
  • GOPR6061.jpg
    GOPR6061.jpg
    149.3 KB · Views: 1,826
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
Perhaps it is the methodical engineer in me, but the way that they multi-task/jump around really frustrates me. Seems strange that the sheathing was started, the fascia was started, the house wrap was started, but none of that is 100% done.

:headscrat :dunno: :headscrat :dunno:
 
Last edited:
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
Starting to get some of the second floor decking/underlayment in place:


attachment.php



A view from the second floor, this was my first time in the space. It is looking very spacious!!!!

attachment.php



A view out of one of the dormers. We almost really messed up the dormers, we had planned for them to be 6' wide, and all of the 'plans' (sketches) showed them at 6', but the contractor had them estimated ($$) at 4' wide. I did a quick sketch of the building with 4' wide dormers and it looked stupid :shocking:. So, we re-worked back to the 6' width. It is much superior.

attachment.php



.
 

Attachments

  • GOPR6062.jpg
    GOPR6062.jpg
    148 KB · Views: 1,785
  • GOPR6066.jpg
    GOPR6066.jpg
    149.6 KB · Views: 1,764
  • GOPR6070.jpg
    GOPR6070.jpg
    104.7 KB · Views: 1,760
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
I have been working on the lighting layout; I started by studying many of the layouts in this thread (HERE). These 2 threads are super helpful :bowdown:.


What do you think of this?


attachment.php




It may be overkill, so I am looking for some real advice. Can I scale back the quantity of the fixtures?

As shown I have, 26 48" double fixtures for LED bulbs (no ballasts). I plan on putting these 26 on 2 or 3 separate circuits. The fixtures and bulbs I plan on using all come from the Sticky Thread HERE.


I am working on a layout for the upstairs, but I think I will use the same fixtures, but with difusers (since the ceiling is less than 8'). Probably end up with a simple 2 rows down the center of the ceiling and 1 or 2 fixtures in each dormer.

..
 

Attachments

  • light layout.jpg
    light layout.jpg
    18.3 KB · Views: 2,115
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
Need some help!

I have been planning on having 2 rows of windows in the garage doors all along. Since the doors face South, this will give us some nice natural light. I am second guessing the way that these look, but what do you think??????




attachment.php




Doors are 10'x10'.
.
 

Attachments

  • 10x10 Garage Door.jpg
    10x10 Garage Door.jpg
    19.9 KB · Views: 1,633
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
Or like this? With the windows in the second bay from the top?

attachment.php



.
 

Attachments

  • 10x10 Garage Door B.jpg
    10x10 Garage Door B.jpg
    20.1 KB · Views: 1,604

wasfast

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 10, 2014
Messages
874
Location
San Diego CA
My initial thought was the 2 rows of glass at the top. High enough so folks can't see directly in, lets in the most light.
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
I also thought about getting frosted glass. To keep unwanted eyes out.....
 
Last edited:

C_F

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jan 21, 2005
Messages
9,675
Location
Utah...SNOW BLOWS!
If it was mine, I would probably choose to put the windows at the top. But having them lower wouldn't be a deal breaker either, as long as prying eyes can't easily see inside.

Regarding your lighting layout, I think you will easily have every square inch of your garage well lit with them all on. Having too much light is sure better than having too little! :thumbup:
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
My initial thought was the 2 rows of glass at the top. High enough so folks can't see directly in, lets in the most light.

Not a bad thought. If I read the specs sheet right on the door, if the top 2 rows were at the top, the bottom window would be about 78" off the floor. Which may be the best bet! :thumbup:
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
I am trying to plan out the ceiling installation (which the wife and I will tackle ourselves). I have selected the following material for the ceiling, it is 1/4" corrugated steel, 29 gauge.


attachment.php






The question I have is should I install some furring strips to the bottom of the trusses so I can install the ceiling to the strips, or should I install the ceiling directly to the bottom cord of the trusses?

attachment.php


If I install furring strips, then I can run the wiring for the lights in the gaps between the bottom cord and the metal. And I can install the panels with the ribs parallel to the truss cords.


What would look best, corrugated ceiling parallel or perpendicular to the trusses?


.
 

Attachments

  • Platte River website cropped.jpg
    Platte River website cropped.jpg
    19.5 KB · Views: 1,514

wasfast

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 10, 2014
Messages
874
Location
San Diego CA
There's plenty of examples here but my own preference (appearance wise) is front to back when viewed from the door. However, it's going to be far easier to install if you are perpendicular to the floor joists. I wouldn't do furring strips myself.
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
There's plenty of examples here but my own preference (appearance wise) is front to back when viewed from the door. However, it's going to be far easier to install if you are perpendicular to the floor joists. I wouldn't do furring strips myself.

I am not sure how I would install the ribs parallel to the joists without some sort of runner or strips. :headscrat :headscrat

I will need to begin a search.....
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
I climbed up on the attached garage roof and snapped this pic: It is really starting to look like a building. We are waiting for shingles to be delivered (due sometime next week).

attachment.php
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20181125_135748427.jpg
    IMG_20181125_135748427.jpg
    146.9 KB · Views: 1,419
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
A few friends have stopped by to take a look at the building, and most of them have the same statement: "It is HUGE!"



Mostly, I think this is due the the 14'+ ceiling height (it will finished slightly shorter than that once the concrete is in).

.
 
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

C_F

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jan 21, 2005
Messages
9,675
Location
Utah...SNOW BLOWS!
HUGE is how it should be! :D I think the size is perfect...I think your friends are just a little jealous, but didn't want to say so. :lol:
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
I spent some quality time outside in the 38 degree weather the other night. I was told that they would start final excavation the following day, so I had to wrap up the downspout piping I wanted to add.

2 spouts on each short side, all tied together at the SW corner, with pipe running into the backyard. The belled sewer pipe was a snap to put together :thumbup:. 10' section make quick work of this.

attachment.php



I also installed the first of 2 conduits for under the concrete. This one runs from the SW to the SE corner. This is just in case I want to pull some wire later in the future without having to go up into the ceiling.

attachment.php



The other conduit under the floor will run from the NW to the SE corner, in a stepped path (long run across the middle, parallel to the roof peak). This will allow me to cut in an outlet or two in the floor at a later date.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20181128_215823777.jpg
    IMG_20181128_215823777.jpg
    85.3 KB · Views: 1,353
  • IMG_20181128_215840073.jpg
    IMG_20181128_215840073.jpg
    82.7 KB · Views: 1,350
Last edited:
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
This brings me to a question:

Does 100 amps of service seem too little for a shop this size?

I don't want to be power limited, but I also don't want to blow the budget on something I will never use. I did the maths, and with what I can figure is the worst worst case ( air compressor running, 2 mini-splits, lights, fans, and a welder), I would be drawing 106+ amps.

I had been planning on pulling the garage power off of the house, but there is really only 100 (maybe 150, maybe) available. I am waiting for the power company to get back to me about adding new service to the shop in order to get 200 or more amp service.
 
Last edited:
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
I have been working on the lighting layout; I started by studying many of the layouts in this thread (HERE). These 2 threads are super helpful :bowdown:.


What do you think of this?


attachment.php




It may be overkill, so I am looking for some real advice. Can I scale back the quantity of the fixtures?

As shown I have, 26 48" double fixtures for LED bulbs (no ballasts). I plan on putting these 26 on 2 or 3 separate circuits. The fixtures and bulbs I plan on using all come from the Sticky Thread HERE.


I am working on a layout for the upstairs, but I think I will use the same fixtures, but with difusers (since the ceiling is less than 8'). Probably end up with a simple 2 rows down the center of the ceiling and 1 or 2 fixtures in each dormer.

..


How should I group the lights?
I was thinking in 2 or 3 banks, or I could do quadrants.


.
 

that-guy

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 6, 2012
Messages
603
Location
NoVA
This brings me to a question:

Does 100 amps of service seem too little for a shop this size?

I don't want to be power limited, but I also don't want to blow the budget on something I will never use. I did the maths, and with what I can figure is the worst worst case ( air compressor running, 2 mini-splits, lights, fans, and a welder), I would be drawing 106+ amps.

I had been planning on pulling the garage power off of the house, but there is really only 100 (maybe 150, maybe) available. I am waiting for the power company to get back to me about adding new service to the shop in order to get 200 or more amp service.

I run 100amps out to my 24 x 24 and have yet to pop a breaker, and I have lots of equipment that pull quite a bit of power. the (7)120V receptacles on the right side of the garage are on a dedicated 20AMP breaker, same with the left. I have (12)T8, 4' long 4 bulb fixtures on the ceiling on a dedicated 15AMP breaker, and a single 220V 50AMP plug on its own breaker

unless you are going to be powering some pretty crazy stuff in your loft, I see no reason to go over 100AMP's, maybe 150 MAX
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
I run 100amps out to my 24 x 24 and have yet to pop a breaker, and I have lots of equipment that pull quite a bit of power. the (7)120V receptacles on the right side of the garage are on a dedicated 20AMP breaker, same with the left. I have (12)T8, 4' long 4 bulb fixtures on the ceiling on a dedicated 15AMP breaker, and a single 220V 50AMP plug on its own breaker

unless you are going to be powering some pretty crazy stuff in your loft, I see no reason to go over 100AMP's, maybe 150 MAX

Nothing crazy in the loft, just lights and 110 outlets.


But I am still skeptical.....

.
 

Finallygotit

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jul 6, 2013
Messages
4,080
Location
Tucson, AZ
I have three 8' four tube T12 fixtures, 12 - 4' LED work lights, 2-1/2 ton mini-split, 60 gallon air compressor, a Bridgeport, a lathe, refrigerator, mig welder, electric on-demand water heater, all kinds of power hungry power tools and have yet to trip a breaker. All of this is on 100 amp service.



YMMV


:beer:
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
I have three 8' four tube T12 fixtures, 12 - 4' LED work lights, 2-1/2 ton mini-split, 60 gallon air compressor, a Bridgeport, a lathe, refrigerator, mig welder, electric on-demand water heater, all kinds of power hungry power tools and have yet to trip a breaker. All of this is on 100 amp service.



YMMV


[emoji481]
That is quite a bit all on 100A. What is the most you've had running at the same time?

Sent using The Garage Journal mobile app
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
My excavator informed me that I am an idiot, and should have used Schedule 40 PVC for the downspouts, not DWV pipe, since they will be buried. :wtf: :mad:

So, last night I ripped out the section in front of the doors and started replacing it. :thumbup:

Should be easier the second time around, since I know what it is supposed to look like, just need to replace it with an exact copy.....:lol_hitti
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
A little preview of things to come, this bad boy got delivered a few days ago! I am very excited to see this get installed! :thumbup::thumbup::thumbup:

attachment.php


attachment.php




The ceiling height with force us to build a platform for the stair to sit on, but I am hoping that it only results in 1-2 steps up from the concrete floor. :beer:

Should be a nice little area near the entrance door, I will probably build in a bench or small closet/shoe storage area here.
 

Attachments

  • spiral 2.jpg
    spiral 2.jpg
    14.6 KB · Views: 1,352
  • spiral 1.jpg
    spiral 1.jpg
    17.3 KB · Views: 1,355

that-guy

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 6, 2012
Messages
603
Location
NoVA
Nothing crazy in the loft, just lights and 110 outlets.


But I am still skeptical.....

.

understandable...I did quite a lot of thinking before finally pulling the trigger on sending the power out to the garage. in the grand scheme of things, I have no desire, especially by myself, to have that many things on in the garage at the same time. plus, I am running a 100amp breaker off of my main house breaker, which is a 200amp service, so I don't see ever having an issue with pulling too much load to justify raising any of my service

too lazy to look back to see if you are doing the electrical yourself or not, but if you are, don't hesitate to call me if you need a hand. went through and did all of this **** to both my garage and inside my house...easy, but time consuming
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
BIG thank you to the professionals over at PROLIGHTING for their help. The thread here was a huge help in helping me find PROLIGHTING. If anyone is considering new shop lighting, definitely give that thread a read.

Dylan at PROLIGHTING helped me with the upper and lower lighting layouts.

Here is the lower floor:

attachment.php



For the upper floor, I will add an additional light in each dormer, and 1 or 2 in the corner stair well.

attachment.php




I also ordered an outdoor LED floodlight from them, and retrofit kits for my attached garage florescent fixtures. I cannot say enough good things about PROLIGHTING (so far, can't wait for the order to arrive).


.
 

Attachments

  • LIGHTING LAYOUT A - UPR.jpg
    LIGHTING LAYOUT A - UPR.jpg
    18 KB · Views: 1,275
  • LIGHTING LAYOUT A - LWR.jpg
    LIGHTING LAYOUT A - LWR.jpg
    18.3 KB · Views: 1,282
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
I finished re-laying the drainage pipe. Little bit harder with the schedule 40 pipe, but also easier, since I knew exactly what it should look like when it was done.

attachment.php


attachment.php





Today I cleaned up the inside, I put the spiral staircase pipe on the wall so it would't be in the way for the final grading.

attachment.php



I also highlighted where the excavator needs to dig deeper for my lift pads. I went way larger than I really need, just in case I decide to get a 2-post later...


attachment.php






Panorama of the interior (from where the stairs will be located):

attachment.php
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20181203_165918173.jpg
    IMG_20181203_165918173.jpg
    148.2 KB · Views: 1,198
  • IMG_20181203_165925383.jpg
    IMG_20181203_165925383.jpg
    152 KB · Views: 1,204
  • IMG_20181207_151943990.jpg
    IMG_20181207_151943990.jpg
    148.2 KB · Views: 1,199
  • IMG_20181207_145434431.jpg
    IMG_20181207_145434431.jpg
    89.2 KB · Views: 1,194
  • IMG_20181207_151832897.jpg
    IMG_20181207_151832897.jpg
    149.6 KB · Views: 1,198
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
Progress has been really slow ever since Thanksgiving. My contractor seems to be preoccupied with other jobs, so I have attempted to express my concerns that finishing my job does not seem like a priority. Little to nothing has been done since the Monday after thanksgiving.

Nearly 2 weeks of stagnation......very frustrating. :mad::mad:
 

C_F

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jan 21, 2005
Messages
9,675
Location
Utah...SNOW BLOWS!
Progress has been really slow ever since Thanksgiving. My contractor seems to be preoccupied with other jobs, so I have attempted to express my concerns that finishing my job does not seem like a priority. Little to nothing has been done since the Monday after thanksgiving.

Nearly 2 weeks of stagnation......very frustrating. :mad::mad:

Maybe your check bounced. :lol_hitti
 
OP
M

MAYOR28

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 22, 2010
Messages
786
Location
Southern MD
I think I have decided to have the local electric co-op install 'new' service to the garage to ensure that we have enough power, now and forever. New 200 amp service will cost an additional ~$700 (delta from the house back-feed), but it should ensure that we have more than enough power for any future hopes and dreams.

I have been wrestling with this decision for most of the weekend, I was worried that the electrical company would charge us an extra $20 a month for the second service, but it looks like this is not the case.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom