Hi all,
I'm not a full time wood worker, I'm at IT professional, and a part time property developer but i LOVE all things wood and enjoy making. I'm in a house we aren't going to sell any time soon (i hope).
Currently i have a single garage at the side of my house with a bedroom above it. No personnel door just a big up and over. The garage is approx. 4.8Mtrs long x 2.6Mtrs wide.
The garage has a MFT type work bench on castors, a mitre saw on a homemade base with vac under, and some other bits and pieces. I have LOTS of tools. I tinker with cars and build houses/extensions so lots of tools.
I have a shed at the side of the garage and i have a compressor in the shed and the hose runs into the garage.
My dust collection is on the MFT a Festool vac of some kind, and then a Titan wet and dry vac under the Mitre saw.
I have an amazing opportunity to extend my garage... a bit unusual in layout though.
As you can see this picture shows the existing garage:
I want to extend the garage to the side.. The red line shows the front building line. I want to keep it a curved wall as its interesting and is in keeping with what is there. I appreciate this will be a nightmare for benches etc inside but it is what is it.
It will have a pitched roof which will be south facing so i will probably put solar panels on it.
I will knock the wall down between the existing garage and the new space. That will enable me to drive a car into the garage and open all doors.
In the new space will be my "making space" mainly woodwork, maybe some welding in future....
I was thinking of digging underground to make an underground store... if I’m digging foundations, it doesn’t make much more effort to dig a basement.... (under the new bit only). However, one of my neighbours who is a property consultant (big building projects commercial scale) said basements nearly always flood and cause problems.... What’s everyone else’s experience with this? I am not planning on working in the basement, however, i think the extra storage space wouldn't hurt! My new garage space might have double doors onto my garden, but two issues with that - security and also wall space!
So, if i was to rein in the basement idea and maybe just dig a covered pit, i could put the compressor (currently in the shed going to get knocked down) and maybe some kind of dust extraction system... so not a full basement but a large pit type system? What else could i put underground.
What am i missing? I will have "some" roof storage space but i plan to put a Velux type window in the middle of the pitch to bring as much light as possible in....
Good people of UKWORKSHOP what would you do.. a bank sheet so to speak.
I did look at putting a car lift into the single garage part to hide a car under ground, but i don't have a car i need to "tuck" away and the cost was about £18k for one of these, with the top surface being a solid surface i could wheel benches onto and use as workable space:
I think that’s overkill for what i need..... I am however lucky to be able to get rid of top soil and hardcore for really cheap so digging out is ok... its the building back up i guess to make it water tight!
Erm.. comments.
I'm not a full time wood worker, I'm at IT professional, and a part time property developer but i LOVE all things wood and enjoy making. I'm in a house we aren't going to sell any time soon (i hope).
Currently i have a single garage at the side of my house with a bedroom above it. No personnel door just a big up and over. The garage is approx. 4.8Mtrs long x 2.6Mtrs wide.
The garage has a MFT type work bench on castors, a mitre saw on a homemade base with vac under, and some other bits and pieces. I have LOTS of tools. I tinker with cars and build houses/extensions so lots of tools.
I have a shed at the side of the garage and i have a compressor in the shed and the hose runs into the garage.
My dust collection is on the MFT a Festool vac of some kind, and then a Titan wet and dry vac under the Mitre saw.
I have an amazing opportunity to extend my garage... a bit unusual in layout though.
As you can see this picture shows the existing garage:
I want to extend the garage to the side.. The red line shows the front building line. I want to keep it a curved wall as its interesting and is in keeping with what is there. I appreciate this will be a nightmare for benches etc inside but it is what is it.
It will have a pitched roof which will be south facing so i will probably put solar panels on it.
I will knock the wall down between the existing garage and the new space. That will enable me to drive a car into the garage and open all doors.
In the new space will be my "making space" mainly woodwork, maybe some welding in future....
I was thinking of digging underground to make an underground store... if I’m digging foundations, it doesn’t make much more effort to dig a basement.... (under the new bit only). However, one of my neighbours who is a property consultant (big building projects commercial scale) said basements nearly always flood and cause problems.... What’s everyone else’s experience with this? I am not planning on working in the basement, however, i think the extra storage space wouldn't hurt! My new garage space might have double doors onto my garden, but two issues with that - security and also wall space!
So, if i was to rein in the basement idea and maybe just dig a covered pit, i could put the compressor (currently in the shed going to get knocked down) and maybe some kind of dust extraction system... so not a full basement but a large pit type system? What else could i put underground.
What am i missing? I will have "some" roof storage space but i plan to put a Velux type window in the middle of the pitch to bring as much light as possible in....
Good people of UKWORKSHOP what would you do.. a bank sheet so to speak.
I did look at putting a car lift into the single garage part to hide a car under ground, but i don't have a car i need to "tuck" away and the cost was about £18k for one of these, with the top surface being a solid surface i could wheel benches onto and use as workable space:
I think that’s overkill for what i need..... I am however lucky to be able to get rid of top soil and hardcore for really cheap so digging out is ok... its the building back up i guess to make it water tight!
Erm.. comments.
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