TLDR: appropriate timber and construction methods for an low profile and cost effective overhead storage area in an integral garage.
Tools available, Tracksaw (TS55), Sliding Mitre saw (KS60- not metal cutting), MFT, Domino, 0.6-1.2-1.8m levels, cheap hammer drill, 18G nailer, drill/driver and some basic hand tools.
I am completely new to woodworking but would like to start so I need some sort of workspace. Home has a single garage that is internal to a townhouse (ground floor comprises of the garage and entrance hall to the front and a utility/garden access and WC to the rear)
I want to make the garage usable as a workshop for various projects I have planned and would intend to do any woodwork in here.
The ceilings are 246cm and I am going to resist screeding the floor as its decent fresh concrete.
Walls are bare blockwork (the dense kind). Party wall has the blocks laid on their sides and internal wall they are laid vertical so half the thickness, maybe only 10cm thick.
I have 20 + of the 64L really useful boxes (71Lx44Wx31H) that I need to store which mainly contain lightweight backpacking and kayaking gear, plus the normal light but bulky stuff such as suitcases etc.
There is a separate cache of heavy gear such as car-camping gear, Heavy tents, beds, cookers etc that are rarely used but I cant bring myself to dispose of just yet. my intention was to build a wheeled chest that all these can fit into which can double up as an assembly table at a push to sit next to an mft.
So my vague plan is….
Some sort of overhead storage area spanning the 2.8m width of the garage. It may as well be 122 wide for best use of sheet goods and that gives me a useful 3.4m2 of space. I am going to try and reserve it for the lightest stuff but if I could be safe to put 150kg that would be excellent.
It would reduce the headroom but if I could keep the bottom of the shelf at 205cm (6’8”) that would be enough for a tall person to pass underneath and still leave 40cm of space.
So I want to keep the shelf a low profile as possible. I was thinking of 45mm x 45mm or similar C24 timber spaced in 4 x intervals beneath a full sheet of 12mm ply. Does this sound strong enough? It would only take up 6cm of the height and that would be really useful. I don’t know how much strength is added by the ply and how much by the horizontal timbers, perhaps I could go down to 9mm ply to save costs and weight? But if a lot of strength is in the ply I could go up to 25mm if necessary
Also, I want a shelf 40cm wide to run around most of the remaining walls of the garage. This would mainly store the aforementioned 64L storage boxes. Ideally this would appear to be ‘floating’ i.e. no diagonal bracing from below where possible so there is head room below, but occasional diagonal bracing from above would be fine.
I hoped to find some L shaped brackets but the biggest I can find are 350mm x 300mm (London style brackets) and I worry they would be overwhelmed by the leverage of the longer shelf/weight.
It would be great to secure a shelf support from the overhead bit across to one of the end walls and then lay the ply on that.
I can also run a beam/support all around the walls attached directly to the blockwork to rest the back of the shelves on and also the ends of and cross members for the overhead section.
I could use box section steel or aluminium instead of wood but I would need a way of cutting it and I’m not sure what wall thickness I need or how to secure it to the shelf material.
Sorry if it’s a bit of a rambling post, any advice on timber thicknesses and construction techniques appreciated
Tools available, Tracksaw (TS55), Sliding Mitre saw (KS60- not metal cutting), MFT, Domino, 0.6-1.2-1.8m levels, cheap hammer drill, 18G nailer, drill/driver and some basic hand tools.
I am completely new to woodworking but would like to start so I need some sort of workspace. Home has a single garage that is internal to a townhouse (ground floor comprises of the garage and entrance hall to the front and a utility/garden access and WC to the rear)
I want to make the garage usable as a workshop for various projects I have planned and would intend to do any woodwork in here.
The ceilings are 246cm and I am going to resist screeding the floor as its decent fresh concrete.
Walls are bare blockwork (the dense kind). Party wall has the blocks laid on their sides and internal wall they are laid vertical so half the thickness, maybe only 10cm thick.
I have 20 + of the 64L really useful boxes (71Lx44Wx31H) that I need to store which mainly contain lightweight backpacking and kayaking gear, plus the normal light but bulky stuff such as suitcases etc.
There is a separate cache of heavy gear such as car-camping gear, Heavy tents, beds, cookers etc that are rarely used but I cant bring myself to dispose of just yet. my intention was to build a wheeled chest that all these can fit into which can double up as an assembly table at a push to sit next to an mft.
So my vague plan is….
Some sort of overhead storage area spanning the 2.8m width of the garage. It may as well be 122 wide for best use of sheet goods and that gives me a useful 3.4m2 of space. I am going to try and reserve it for the lightest stuff but if I could be safe to put 150kg that would be excellent.
It would reduce the headroom but if I could keep the bottom of the shelf at 205cm (6’8”) that would be enough for a tall person to pass underneath and still leave 40cm of space.
So I want to keep the shelf a low profile as possible. I was thinking of 45mm x 45mm or similar C24 timber spaced in 4 x intervals beneath a full sheet of 12mm ply. Does this sound strong enough? It would only take up 6cm of the height and that would be really useful. I don’t know how much strength is added by the ply and how much by the horizontal timbers, perhaps I could go down to 9mm ply to save costs and weight? But if a lot of strength is in the ply I could go up to 25mm if necessary
Also, I want a shelf 40cm wide to run around most of the remaining walls of the garage. This would mainly store the aforementioned 64L storage boxes. Ideally this would appear to be ‘floating’ i.e. no diagonal bracing from below where possible so there is head room below, but occasional diagonal bracing from above would be fine.
I hoped to find some L shaped brackets but the biggest I can find are 350mm x 300mm (London style brackets) and I worry they would be overwhelmed by the leverage of the longer shelf/weight.
It would be great to secure a shelf support from the overhead bit across to one of the end walls and then lay the ply on that.
I can also run a beam/support all around the walls attached directly to the blockwork to rest the back of the shelves on and also the ends of and cross members for the overhead section.
I could use box section steel or aluminium instead of wood but I would need a way of cutting it and I’m not sure what wall thickness I need or how to secure it to the shelf material.
Sorry if it’s a bit of a rambling post, any advice on timber thicknesses and construction techniques appreciated