Charles (in GA)
Well-known member
For those who built garages or shops from scratch, or did major modifications or expansions to existing shops or garages....................
What is the one (or more) major things you wished you had done differently, with regard to layout, construction methods or techniques, features (windows, doors, etc), that you almost daily kick yourself for having not done.
Either you knew you needed to do it and had no money, or time, or you just didn't think you needed to, or you simply didn't know to....................
Whats that one thing that now is difficult, expensive, or impossible to go back and install or change....
Lets here your stories......................................................
Mine, built a 60x60x16 eave (21 ft peak) steel building. Its an aircraft hangar. It uses a door system made by Horton Stack door in Wellington, Kansas (great people). When you open the doors, they stick out, no big deal. What I wished, and never gave any thought to at the time, was having an overhang of the roof, so when it rained I wouldn't have to stop and close the doors to keep it from blowing in on the floor.
First pic is of the doors partially opened, They are 14 ft tall, so when it rains or blowing rain, it comes in on the floor. Close up the building, it gets hot, and you cannot continue working, aside from the time wasted opening and closing the doors.
Second pic is of a small metal building, same manufacturer and same guy erected it that did my building. It is used as a local warehouse for delivery trucks to distribute pizza ingredients for Hunt Bros pizzas you see in convenience stores. It has this neat overhang. This overhang is easy to have done when my building was designed, just use longer purlins that hang out past the truss/frame, then continue the roofing on top, and add roofing sheets underneath. A 6 ft overhang would have required four additional roof sheets (two top, two underneath, and 6 ft of trim on the edges on each side, thats it. I simply didn't know to do it (and was nearly out of cash anyhow at that point).
But, every time I open up the building nowdays, I gently kick myself and wished I had that overhang, especially with the rains we have had the past couple of weeks. It also would help keep the sun from beating in on the floor slab and heating the concrete up in the mornings.
Lets here your Woulda, Coulda, Shoulda issues.
Charles
What is the one (or more) major things you wished you had done differently, with regard to layout, construction methods or techniques, features (windows, doors, etc), that you almost daily kick yourself for having not done.
Either you knew you needed to do it and had no money, or time, or you just didn't think you needed to, or you simply didn't know to....................
Whats that one thing that now is difficult, expensive, or impossible to go back and install or change....
Lets here your stories......................................................
Mine, built a 60x60x16 eave (21 ft peak) steel building. Its an aircraft hangar. It uses a door system made by Horton Stack door in Wellington, Kansas (great people). When you open the doors, they stick out, no big deal. What I wished, and never gave any thought to at the time, was having an overhang of the roof, so when it rained I wouldn't have to stop and close the doors to keep it from blowing in on the floor.
First pic is of the doors partially opened, They are 14 ft tall, so when it rains or blowing rain, it comes in on the floor. Close up the building, it gets hot, and you cannot continue working, aside from the time wasted opening and closing the doors.
Second pic is of a small metal building, same manufacturer and same guy erected it that did my building. It is used as a local warehouse for delivery trucks to distribute pizza ingredients for Hunt Bros pizzas you see in convenience stores. It has this neat overhang. This overhang is easy to have done when my building was designed, just use longer purlins that hang out past the truss/frame, then continue the roofing on top, and add roofing sheets underneath. A 6 ft overhang would have required four additional roof sheets (two top, two underneath, and 6 ft of trim on the edges on each side, thats it. I simply didn't know to do it (and was nearly out of cash anyhow at that point).
But, every time I open up the building nowdays, I gently kick myself and wished I had that overhang, especially with the rains we have had the past couple of weeks. It also would help keep the sun from beating in on the floor slab and heating the concrete up in the mornings.
Lets here your Woulda, Coulda, Shoulda issues.
Charles
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