OP
Wow. I finally made it to the end!! I hate coming to the party late!!!! It takes forever to get to the end!
Jack, amazing man! I saw the pic of your garage on jalopnik, but never could get to the article, assuming there was one. I was irritated that I couldn't find out more about it! I don't get on here much, usually just to check BB767's 1930's welding shop, Utah's bunker, and Rieferman's barn saving. I stumbled upon GIAG's renovation thread last week and in reading that, clicked on the links in your sig to look at the car. Then I clicked on the garage build link. I was most pleasantly surprised to see the porsche and the green cabinets! So I've been reading the better part of 5 days to catch up!
One thing you never really discussed is the overhead storage above the garage doors. I have a 115" ceiling height in my garage and would love to see just a little more on how you built the shelf/shelves above the overhead door. I did see the photo on your website but I couldn't tell much from that.
Anyway, great job! I love what you have done and are doing with the place. Your frugality and ingenuity and ability to just do, regardless of whether you have to re-do or not, is admirable. The car is awesome too! Love to see the videos of you at Willow Springs.
BTW, thanks for posting the shade fabric project, as well as the link to the welding forum where you had it. I have a Spanish style house with a courtyard similar to yours and I've been trying to figure out how to get some shade out there as well. I hadn't thought of going above the beams, I was going to use the beams to support some screens made of fabric. Now I think I'm going to try and come up with a support structure to bolt to the beams. Won't make it as claustrophobic in there!
Thanks for the peek into your world. It's fun.
Jeff
Thanks, Jeff! When this thread passed a hundred pages I figured the chances of anyone making it all the way through had disappeared. So I appreciate the dedication.
On the above-the-garage-door storage, I just made a pair of platforms to fit the area -- they're 2x3's with a sheet of MDF on top. Then there are vertical pieces that go to the ceiling. I ran a 2x4 to span a couple of ceiling joists to distribute the load, and also included a steel support, so that if the wood ever rotted/pulled-loose/whatever, there'd be a back-up to keep the shelf and its contents from falling on a car.
Here's a picture to show one of the vertical assemblies.
The shade thing continues to surprise me in that the fabric hasn't come loose. The only thing holding it on are those binder clips from the office supply store. But having one every 6" or so provides a lot of cumulative clamping force, I guess. I think it also helps that the patio has a regular roof on two sides. I think this reduces the wind the thing is exposed to significantly. The Sunbrella fabric I have covering a similar frame where I park my car flaps around, but the shade fabric above the patio never seems to move at all.
Burn through is one danger -- so is warping from the heat. One workaround might be to have button-head screws go in to strips of wood from the outside. You could set them at even intervals on a line and they might look 'on purpose' there. I had to do that for the curved strip of aluminum on the edge of my sink counter. It kept popping lose with just construction adhesive. But if you evenly space the fasteners, it looks all right.Thanks for the pictures and suggestions, Jack! Really appreciate your insight. I had been thinking something along those lines as a mounting strategy - your description has helped me firm up my plan. I am inclined to try to weld up some strips like your stronghold cabinet, however I'm thinking that the combination of the thin steel of my cabinets and the thin skills of my welding are going to lead to some holy cabinets. Perhaps I'll try a test tack on the back and see how it goes. I feel like I'm talking shop with a right celebrity here. Thanks again!

