Well, it finally ended up happening. 6 years, 21 floods, 2 wood stoves, a lot of free tools, and 1100 GJ posts later, we are moving to a new home.
While I’m excited about the next chapter, I’m gutted to be leaving this workshop. It’s a great space, and for its size, it never really felt all that small, even with a 3500-lb milling machine in it. It taught me that if you treat your space like your dream shop, it will actually deliver more than you thought if you get creative.
I think I’m going to keep the WorkShop 88 moniker, going forward. I like it, and I’ve branded some of my shop tools with it, so that part will stay. However, I think I will probably switch gears to a new thread about the new shop, to keep things clear. I will start that thread once there is something to show for it.
The new-to-us-house (circa. 1962), is about a half hour east in a smaller town, with a slightly larger lot than where we are now – 52x100, instead of 40x100. What’s interesting is that this place has no garage (yet), but instead, has a 10x13 shed with a poured floor in the back corner. All told, it’s a solid shed, but unfortunately directly where a garage will go.
I haven’t nailed anything down yet as far as a size/design goes, but a little bigger and a little taller would be a lot more convenient (I actually have considered duplicating the shop entirely). While by-laws permit me to have 10% for outdoor structures (520 sqft), I can’t configure a building that size without taking up too big a chunk of the backyard, since the house sits further back on the property. My realistic max is around +/-400 sqft, 18’x24’ being the biggest I could probably go. So, definitely bigger, but still set up as a 1 car. The house is a bungalow with updated 200 Amp service, so there is plenty for wiring the shop.
I have drawn a lot of inspiration from other shops on this site, and from the host of people who have contributed to this thread with comments, ideas, or reality checks to some of my dumb ideas. Huge thank you to anyone who came along for the ride. I have had a ton of fun with this shop, and if any part of it inspired someone else to get out there and build something, I think that’s pretty cool.