old_smokey
Well-known member
"you should knock it down" single car garage rescue
EDIT/UPDATE:
Condition of garage when I bought the house, June 2018

progress as of 2020:


Wife and I bought our first house a couple weeks ago. I enjoy restoring and modifying motorcycles, so having a garage was a 'must' while buying. I live in central Canada where it gets verrrrrry cold in winter, so insulating it for those -30C days was a requirement as well.
Long story short, I technically ended up with a garage, but it's a 'pile' to put it lightly. Leaning 3" toward my neighbour's parking pad, and a few inches toward the house. Frame has a lot of rotten bits, no proper bracing inside the building, a few real bodge attempts at shoring up the building to prevent collapse. The man door is broken and the overhead door is good for scrap and nothing else.
A perfect summer project
Everyone looks at me funny and says it's not worth it to repair, just knock it down and rebuild. But after getting some quotes in, that wasn't an option. Just bought a house, I don't have cash for a new building. But I do have time, and I do like fixing stuff, so why not.
First was a trip to the local rural dump, where I scored two lovely double pane windows. They're in great shape, just need a wash and paint on the trim. My Dad's shop has a nice big window in front of the work bench and it's a real treat to work on an engine with all that natural light pouring in.

Next up was some hunting on Kijiji (that's Craig's list for canucks). Garage theft is an issue in my area I learned. Neighbour had his garage raided and lost 25K in tools. So I need to make this thing fort knox. I found a guy gutting a commercial building and got this solid steel fire door for a song. With a jimmy-proof lock, it should keep all but the most committed thieves at bay. For the windows I'll weld up some bars, and the car door still needs some figuring.

The plan is to pull the building straight with cables and turnbuckles, run a sub panel from the house for power, insulate, and sheet the inside with plywood. Install some good lights and an electrical heater, and I should have a nice place to play with motos over winter.
Dad came over last night to give me a hand and we started pulling the walls straight. My East wall is anchored to the concrete pad and is solid at the bottom, but leaning out a bit. I placed a concrete anchor in the pad and used a rock climbing anchor to attache the turn buckle. I drilled a hole through the wood siding and through a piece of 2x4 that spread the force across the top plate, frame, and some of the siding. A few twists of the turnbuckle and the wall came in. 2" out before, now the plumb line is bang on.


The West wall had spread out by several inches at the bottom and needed to be pulled back in. The previous owners had done some real bodgy things, like mounting a garage door to the sagging frame before fixing it, so there was a 3" gap at the bottom of the door when closed. I removed all the garage door mounting bolts and ran a cable from the East, well anchored bottom plate across the floor and through the sagging West wall. The cable was also anchored into a big 2x6 on the outside of the building to spread the force along the wall. A few turn buckle twists, some light taps along the base with a rubber mallet, and the wall slowly crept back to level.

At this point, my East and West walls were now straight and level. I drove 3/8" concrete anchors through the bottom plate of the West wall and into the pad, bolting the plate to the pad. Now my whole garage is bolted in the corners. I have a slight 1/2" bow in the middle that I'll pull in and bolt tonight. At that point, I will only have a slight lean toward the North, by about 1". Using anchors in the pad I'll pull it back the same way.
Once the frame is straight (hopefully by Sunday) I'm going to enforce and replace a few sections of rotten wood, then rough in the windows and man door.
I have most of my electrical bits ordered (sub panel, wiring to run from the house, lights etc and just need to make a better floor plan before starting to run the wiring.
The siding is not great but it's thick lead paint and I don't wanna even go there right now. Instead I'm going to patch a couple small cracks and holes, then use Tyvek house wrap from the inside (kinda bodgy I know). It'll save me a lot of work, but also keep the garage from looking too nice...might help with theft.
More to come!
EDIT/UPDATE:
Condition of garage when I bought the house, June 2018

progress as of 2020:


Wife and I bought our first house a couple weeks ago. I enjoy restoring and modifying motorcycles, so having a garage was a 'must' while buying. I live in central Canada where it gets verrrrrry cold in winter, so insulating it for those -30C days was a requirement as well.
Long story short, I technically ended up with a garage, but it's a 'pile' to put it lightly. Leaning 3" toward my neighbour's parking pad, and a few inches toward the house. Frame has a lot of rotten bits, no proper bracing inside the building, a few real bodge attempts at shoring up the building to prevent collapse. The man door is broken and the overhead door is good for scrap and nothing else.
A perfect summer project
Everyone looks at me funny and says it's not worth it to repair, just knock it down and rebuild. But after getting some quotes in, that wasn't an option. Just bought a house, I don't have cash for a new building. But I do have time, and I do like fixing stuff, so why not.
First was a trip to the local rural dump, where I scored two lovely double pane windows. They're in great shape, just need a wash and paint on the trim. My Dad's shop has a nice big window in front of the work bench and it's a real treat to work on an engine with all that natural light pouring in.

Next up was some hunting on Kijiji (that's Craig's list for canucks). Garage theft is an issue in my area I learned. Neighbour had his garage raided and lost 25K in tools. So I need to make this thing fort knox. I found a guy gutting a commercial building and got this solid steel fire door for a song. With a jimmy-proof lock, it should keep all but the most committed thieves at bay. For the windows I'll weld up some bars, and the car door still needs some figuring.

The plan is to pull the building straight with cables and turnbuckles, run a sub panel from the house for power, insulate, and sheet the inside with plywood. Install some good lights and an electrical heater, and I should have a nice place to play with motos over winter.
Dad came over last night to give me a hand and we started pulling the walls straight. My East wall is anchored to the concrete pad and is solid at the bottom, but leaning out a bit. I placed a concrete anchor in the pad and used a rock climbing anchor to attache the turn buckle. I drilled a hole through the wood siding and through a piece of 2x4 that spread the force across the top plate, frame, and some of the siding. A few twists of the turnbuckle and the wall came in. 2" out before, now the plumb line is bang on.


The West wall had spread out by several inches at the bottom and needed to be pulled back in. The previous owners had done some real bodgy things, like mounting a garage door to the sagging frame before fixing it, so there was a 3" gap at the bottom of the door when closed. I removed all the garage door mounting bolts and ran a cable from the East, well anchored bottom plate across the floor and through the sagging West wall. The cable was also anchored into a big 2x6 on the outside of the building to spread the force along the wall. A few turn buckle twists, some light taps along the base with a rubber mallet, and the wall slowly crept back to level.

At this point, my East and West walls were now straight and level. I drove 3/8" concrete anchors through the bottom plate of the West wall and into the pad, bolting the plate to the pad. Now my whole garage is bolted in the corners. I have a slight 1/2" bow in the middle that I'll pull in and bolt tonight. At that point, I will only have a slight lean toward the North, by about 1". Using anchors in the pad I'll pull it back the same way.
Once the frame is straight (hopefully by Sunday) I'm going to enforce and replace a few sections of rotten wood, then rough in the windows and man door.
I have most of my electrical bits ordered (sub panel, wiring to run from the house, lights etc and just need to make a better floor plan before starting to run the wiring.
The siding is not great but it's thick lead paint and I don't wanna even go there right now. Instead I'm going to patch a couple small cracks and holes, then use Tyvek house wrap from the inside (kinda bodgy I know). It'll save me a lot of work, but also keep the garage from looking too nice...might help with theft.
More to come!
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