dreamingmuscle
Well-known member
Sold my stock in Home depot then got the shell built. I'm still working on the electrical and plumbing.
Thats my worry with just saving. We have a lot of projects in and around the house that will easily eat up all the shop money. So its either going to take forever to build something, or we will have to finance it. I don't want to get into crazy debt over a building that isn't 100% needed, but I also don't want to wait 20 years to put something up.
Sounds like lots of planning is needed to make it happen in a reasonable amount of time without being in a massive hole at the end.
Sean
And then there is the real money to fill it with machinery and tools!!!
Bill

20190629_072252 by Julian Lopacki, on FlickrFinancing it allows you to have it "now", but, due to the extra money for interest, you will pay for it longer than if you just saved that money. However, the cost of materials and construction can also go up while you are saving...

Saving and home equity line of credit for our building that is 50x80x16 with 16' wide overhang and 1,600sq ft second floor which is what the wife wanted for extra storage. Only reason we didn't hold out on waiting longer to build it is because wife wanted to have our wedding in our barn. Have about $113k into it.
20190629_072252 by Julian Lopacki, on Flickr

HOW in the heck did you do that for less than $29 per square foot (just the footprint, not even including the second floor!)?![]()

Live below your means,don't buy the latest and greatest f*cking iphone,don't go out to eat everynight,don't buy a new car every three years....the list could go on and on....
I built my 660 square foot garage in '07 and paid for it.
This should be day to day living, not just saving for a garage.
We were able to build our first shop, pay our first home off in less than 15 years, buy RV's, have no auto loans, upgrade homes and build a much nicer second shop by living that way. Peace of mind knowing you don't live paycheck to paycheck alone is worth it.

This should be day to day living, not just saving for a garage.
We were able to build our first shop, pay our first home off in less than 15 years, buy RV's, have no auto loans, upgrade homes and build a much nicer second shop by living that way. Peace of mind knowing you don't live paycheck to paycheck alone is worth it.
Goes without saying...at least for people with common sense.![]()
Especially in this disposable society and one of instant gratification that we now live in where everyone has to have everything right now rather than work and save for it.
I simply don't understand it, and these are supposed to be smart people. At least that's what they're telling everyone.
Thanks for taking care of that.Most of this will still stay true but this thread was brought back from a 2 year death by a now banned spammer.
Not sure, he hasn't been around since February of '21.Thanks for taking care of that.
Wonder if the OP ever managed to start the build.
