Hooboy, has is been a LONG time since I posted. If I were guessing, I thought it had been about a year - but looking back, it’s more than 2 years!
As one might expect, a LOT has changed in my world, both in the garage and out.
Starting with the garage, I left off about 18 months after I got the addition done. Other than a desire for it to be about 10 feet longer and wider (as is always the case), I’m happy with the space still.
I’ve come to realize that while it’s fun to jam the cars in (I’ve had as many as 8 cars across the two garages), it’s far more enjoyable to have some working room on the floor. I’ve settled into a spot where I have four cars of mine and one space for my wife. I also still have the extra garage down the street where my ’72 F250 lives - out of the weather.
The one significant addition to the garage was in the bathroom. I play baseball in an 30+ men’s league and once the garage was done, I regretted not putting in a shower in the half bath we built. Nights when I get home from baseball I have to trudge through the house in my dirty uniform to make it to the upstairs bathroom. Not great.
So I decided I would see what I could do about adding a shower. On the opposite side of my garage bathroom was a mostly unused corner of the original garage. So one day I cleared it out and envisioned what it might look like to extend the bathroom into that space. Here’s the tape on the ground for me to visualize.
From there, I had a plumber out to determine what it would take to tie the plumbing into the drain and ultimately how much concrete would have to be removed. He looked at the space and immediately said “just build a platform and put your shower in there”. Brilliant! Three weeks later, I was showering in the garage after games!
Originally it looked like this - the wooden box is where I was envisioning the opening into the new shower “room”.
Framed (showing from the old garage).
Hole cut into the bathroom (showing from the new garage)
The only other change to the garage is a basic rearrangement that allows for better parking and floor space. Photos of this below.
This time last year we started entertaining the idea of doing another home build. We’ve been in this house for seven years, and that’s about when we get antsy for a new large project. We bought a lot one street over and I designed house with 5 garage bays, two of which were double deep. I had some GRAND plans in mind - taking all that I learned with the addition and applying it. Sadly, when the bids came back, it was going to be more than a million to build …. so those plans are on ice.
We may revisit the options down the road, and I’ve already designed a four car plan that might be easier to build, but for now, we wait.
And then last year I decided after spending 24 years in the consulting and business ownership space, I was going to take a job with one of my long-time clients. To say it’s been an adjustment is more than an understatement - but after 5 months, I’m still here. The biggest change has been the $$$, so the car purchasing pace has … well, slowed
Which brings me to the car element of this update. When I found out it had been two years since the update, I went over to my trusty car spreadsheet to count how many had come and gone in that time … GULP. 30!
I have no desire to recap all 30 - or even a fraction of that - but I’ll hit some highlights.
Bought a couple “bucket list cars” - first was an Aston Martin V8 Vantage. Amazing car - six speed - terrible sight lines when driving but easily one of the most beautiful cars I’ve ever owned.
Had the opportunity shortly after buying the Vantage to buy back my ’01 996 911 Turbo in Lapis Blue. Sold it years ago with roughly 21k miles - basically a mint version. Bought it back last year with 31k miles - in better condition. And in car-guy fashion, I arranged for a road trip. The guy who bought my Vantage lived on the same side of the country as the 911 Turbo, so I had the car shipped to him and then he drove it to our meetup spot in Nashville. Sat and talked cars for a couple hours then went our separate ways. Amazing trip in two really amazing cars.
I’ve had three different BMW 850s since the last update - first a Calypso 6-speed followed by a Brilliantrot 6-speed followed by an Orient Blue automatic.
The Orient Blue 850 was a purchase off BaT - got a good deal on it but when it arrived, it had the worst orange peel of any car I’ve ever owned. About six weeks and countless hours wet sanding, I got it looking great.
During this stretch, I also crossed off another bucket list car - an E34 M5 Touring - in Avus Blue of course. I chased this car for over a year before finally biting the bullet and buying it. I flew out to New Hampshire, drove it to a friend’s house in New Jersey and then shipped it home. Enjoyed the hell out of it, but ultimately couldn’t hold on. I sold it to a close friend who loves it and drives it a LOT.
Also briefly owned an S54-swapped E46 Touring - completely crazy car that could easily satisfy any car person.
I also imported two cars during the last two years - the first was an E34 525xi Touring - an all-wheel drive E34 wagon. It was a fun project - beast of a car in the snow.
The other one I alluded to in my thread - a Japanese import - an Alpina E36 B6 Touring. I really enjoyed that one - and if my new desire for limited cars didn’t kick in, I’d still have it. It now sits in one of the more amazing collections I’ve ever seen.
Bought a P38 rover - didn’t love it.
Bought two 955 Cayennes - one Turbo and one GTS. Couldn’t make either work.
Bought a couple other 911s - a 997 Targa and a 996 C4S. Loved both but ultimately couldn’t hold on to either.
Last Summer, my reservation for my Rivian finally came due. I had a reservation on the new Bronco - a first edition - that I didn’t follow through on. Terrible financial mistake, obviously. So I pulled the trigger on the Rivian and drove it for four months. Loved it and would still have it if it weren’t for the cost. I hate having a car payment, so I sold it back in December.
I also had the opportunity to buy a car I’ve wanted for five years - an E34 M540i. It’s a Canadian market car - 1 of 32 - in Avus Blue, of course. The friend who bought the M5 Touring ultimately needed to make room, so I was the beneficiary.
So as of today, the fleet is:
1972 Ford F250
1993 BMW 850Ci
1995 BMW M3
1995 BMW M540i
2008 BMW 535xi Wagon
The daily driver is the E61 wagon - and so far I’m liking it. I’m running some Apex wheels I stole from my son’s E46 Touring and I have a set of F80 M3 wheels that’ll go on in the Spring.
I’ll do my best to stay up to date with this thread, now that the car frenzy has slowed. I just purchased a Vestaboard for the garage as well, so I may post about some home automation stuff I’m doing with it.