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View Full Version : What is your garage size?


blazerbrad
12-27-2012, 10:36 AM
Currently shopping for a new house and trying to compromise with the wife. She wants to live in a neighborhood/subdivision again, but I want a garage or shop that is actually feasible to work on my off-road rig which is a K5 Blazer. If you have shopped for this setup you know that subdivision + seperate shop, or space to build a shop, is pretty scarce.

Our old house has the typical 2 car attached garage that was about 20' deep, and by the time I put my tools in it and all of the kids stuff it wasn't practical to use to work on my rig. Been looking at the small subdivisions with around the 1 acre lots that might have space for a shop (a lot of these lots are real narrow so difficult to get a drive to a shop in the back), but might need to settle on an attached garage.

So what size is your garage that is actually used to work on a rig?

humpy
12-27-2012, 10:59 AM
25x25 with a 9 foot wide door in front.. Strictly tools and rig no other stuff like lawn mowers or kid stuff... It's tight but workable... I pay to have my yard mowed so I don't lose garage space storing mowers...,your k5 would fit with enough room to walk around and work on... I have to bend the long stuff out in driveway.. If I put my ex cab shortbed silverado in I'm too fat to walk around it.. Hope that helps

tbshakie
12-27-2012, 11:44 AM
i know exactly what you are doing as my wife and I did that 6 years ago. My attached garage is 24x24 but the doors are too short to fit the jeeps in unless i air the tires way down. I have a barn on our property (we have 5.5 acres) that is 24X48 with a 14 ft high door. I have 4 vehicles in this garage (2 jeeps, 1 passenger car and one old camaro on a lift).

I dont miss living in a neighborhood one bit.

93 Krawler
12-27-2012, 12:59 PM
The original attached garage is 20x20 for cars, toys, etc. The added attached garage is 24x24 with a 16x8 main garage door, and a 10x8 door in back that leads to a 8x18 concrete pad. I used scissor trusses so my rig could be raised up on the lift.

I have a house for sale in Ross Township. Garage is 20x24. The lot is 101x198. Big enough yard to build a nice garage out back.

Nuts
12-27-2012, 01:08 PM
The trick to a small garage is having two smaller doors instead of one wide door. That forces you to split up the space you have instead of parking one rig in the middle and stacking **** around the walls. Mine is 24'x24' on the inside, and right now there is a samurai, a Rockwelled 44" tired buggy project and my bender is bolted down. Its pretty crowded but I can still work in there.

biggin69
12-27-2012, 01:47 PM
I believe that you can not have a big enough garage. The bigger garage you have, the more stuff you will put in it.

twiztedzuki
12-27-2012, 02:10 PM
just built a 32'x40' with 12.5' ceiling for lift and it not big enough, i think need pole barn put finish projects in, parkin buggys in there takes up work room

timido
12-27-2012, 02:29 PM
mine is 24x36 with 3 doors on it. I wish it was a little bigger and it had the doors on the short side. like 30x 40 with 14ft doors on the 30 side

94Dodge Truggy
12-27-2012, 02:42 PM
Garage is 24x32 with 2 doors. Wifes suv, jeep, side x side, quad, dirtbike fit great with tools. Shed is 12x24 with more gas powered items. Shop is 50x110 but full of useful equipment and 1 minivan. Cameras and alarm systems on all as well! Make sure the subdivision and laws will allow you to build a shed if you plan on adding a structure.

blazerbrad
12-27-2012, 03:57 PM
We found one place that has a typical 2 car attached plus a nice 30x36 heated shop, but the wife doesn't really like the location....haven't completely took it off the radar screen yet. Found several houses on 1 acre lots but the frontage is really narrow and don't think you could get a drive way between the house and property line:rolleyes:

The garage door height is another thing...the rig won't fit under the standard 7' door without letting a lot of air out of the tires and I don't want to mess with that.

donaldcon
12-27-2012, 09:39 PM
30x40 with 12ft ceiling and 10ft tall doors.

Sonnybob
12-28-2012, 04:18 AM
I looked round an bought 10 acres an put my 90x80 shop behind my house. Put a lift in too an love it. Best $ i ever spent. I use radiant gas heaters mounted at 12 ft an used a drop ceiling. Stays warm enough to work in a t shirt.

WrenchMonkey
12-28-2012, 10:42 AM
Bought my house (~1100sf) specifically for the garage (20x24) and outbuilding (16x22) on a standard half-acre subdivision lot.

I have almost as much garage space as living space, but like they said, it's never enough.

It was good when I just had the XJ, but storing the Willys, as small as it is, eats up a ton of space and flexibility.

I think a good size two-car would do what you need, as long as you can commit to that being ALL you ever expect it to do: one rig, plus shop tools. But sticking to that limit is harder than it sounds. A storage shed for bikes and mowers is a must.

Robert

JeffK5
12-28-2012, 12:18 PM
Got a 24x34 underhouse 4-car(ish) and a 10x12 shed. The shed is newly built and empty.

The key to making any size garage work is a shed..put all that kid/lawn/flammable crap in there.

I have two atv's ,RZR XP, compact tractor with blade&loader , half built 4 seater rock buggy and 1K foot of tube in there along with a wood spliter and 1/4 cord of wood and all the kid/lawn stuff....breath.....and 3x20 work bench and mobil 4x4 weld table!

So needless to say I spend 20 min. moving crap to do anything in there ..I do have a sweet set of double doors that let me put something as big as my XP in the basement if I chose to so I can keep a lot of stuff close to my work area but not directly in the way.

Build a shed no matter what!

fmlewis
12-28-2012, 02:08 PM
I have a 20x40 with 10ft ceilings with a 2 car carport on the front to boot. Also a small shed for lawn crap.

The only car in the garage is the jeep currently. One bay is the work bench / shop area. The other bay is the kids bay (bikes, scooters, etc). Typically the wife parks her truck in there but its not recently because we have a trailer in there. I have 800sq.ft. and I don't even get to park my damn car inside. At least its under a carport so no scrapping for me, lol.

My recommendation is more for the door size. Standard size is 16x7, but if you can find an 18x7 buy it. Its much better at that width.

If you wait long enough my place will be for sale hopefully this spring/summer timeframe. Its in Fairfield.

fordman00
12-28-2012, 02:18 PM
My dad just bought a home off route 4 in fairfield by millikin road.it has a two car atrached and 2 car detached. Plus a amish built shed you could prolly get 2 jeeps in or four razors its huge. The detached garage is big enough to work on a jeep and have a small car in there ill have to get the dimensions though. Oh and it has heat,air,cable,and set up for a welder and compressor. :D

Sent from my DROID RAZR using Tapatalk 2

KargoMaster
12-28-2012, 05:01 PM
Yep, agree with most everyone... 7' tall doors suck... single doors seem better for cars, large double-wide door better for junk... :D

2 car attached and workshop detached seems to work out well for me and several others...
More utilities would certainly be a plus...
Mine is 24 x 34 with a large double-wide door on the 24 side that faces the street...

We're in an older-ish subdivision (1974 is relatively "older-ish" for real estate, right?) but my shop was built in 1994... but here's the key... subdivision WITHOUT HOA FEES... I was not kidding around about that with my better half, that was a deal breaker for me...

Set up that expectation early and it will help with the "Oh, Honey, this subdivision without trees and houses stacked like pancakes is sooooo beautiful, isn't it?" conversations...

FWIW, they marketed my 24x34 garage as 4 car plus the two car attached, makes 6 in the MLS listing... I found it very easy to filter MLS listings by garage... and we looked passively, actively, passively, actively for over 9 years... (hope that doesn't bum you out... the right place is there to make everyone happy... just a matter of time to find it)

KargoMaster
12-28-2012, 05:06 PM
blah, blah, blah

The key to making any size garage work is a shed..put all that kid/lawn/flammable crap in there.

blah, blah, blah

Build a shed no matter what!

I couldn't possibly agree more with this idea... I previously neglected to mention the shed in the rear corner of the lot with the lawn/garden/never-played-with-kid-stuff... (and an extra CJ hood in the rafters!)

93 Krawler
12-28-2012, 07:01 PM
I couldn't possibly agree more with this idea... I previously neglected to mention the shed in the rear corner of the lot with the lawn/garden/never-played-with-kid-stuff... (and an extra CJ hood in the rafters!)

Yep, I got a 12x12 shed out back as well. All the lawn stuff and extra rig parts are in it. I wish I had went another 5' back with the rear wall.

underpowered
12-29-2012, 11:05 AM
i live in an older-ish subdivision as well. If i wanted, there is enough room on my half acre to build a shop as my lot is pretty well square, i have no issue storing my rig in my back yard right now. it has a typical 20x24 attached garage but with only two 6'6"doors. I have to fold the mirrors on my truck to fit it in and it only clears by a couple inches. my blazer won't fit at all in my garage, but there are a few in my neighborhood with detached garages.

but i would much rather have a large single door than my two small doors. to pull my truck in the small door, its tight and i can't move it to one side. with one larger door i could pull in diagonally and leave me plenty of room on all sides to work on it. but for the most part, my garage is storage with room for one car still in it. i don't do much work other than oil changes and such in my garage. big stuff, i go to my parents farm in their 40x60 heated garage.