Anybody added a stall to their garage recently. Looking to add on and just wondering what something like that would cost. I've got a pad of concrete already, just want to box it in.
This. Regardless of what she tells you.Make sure it's twice as big as you think you need...
I built my shed as large as I could without having to pull a building permit, and I'm constantly kicking myself for not going bigger. So I'll second this.Make sure it's twice as big as you think you need...
I'm sure your wife tells you its plenty big but we all know otherwise.This. Regardless of what she tells you.
Uh huh... you of all people know how hard it is to get to England in a row boat.I'm sure your wife tells you its plenty big but we all know otherwise.
I had a garage addition bid a few years back. My current garage is technically a 3 car, but one side is a drive-through tandem (garage door both front and rear). I wanted to mirror that drive through tandem, so it was a bit bigger than adding a standard stall. If I remember right, the estimate was in at $80-$100K range (I would have done the slab separately). Tying it into the existing roofline is expensive.Anybody added a stall to their garage recently. Looking to add on and just wondering what something like that would cost. I've got a pad of concrete already, just want to box it in.
What is your purpose?Anybody added a stall to their garage recently. Looking to add on and just wondering what something like that would cost. I've got a pad of concrete already, just want to box it in.
When we built our detached garage many years ago, we added two feet to the width to make it 26x24. I'm so glad we did that because those extra two feet made all the difference in the world. Same thing with our driveway when we replaced it a few years ago and made it one foot wider.
Your perimeter walls must be on top of your new footing. Just making sure you know that.Guess I should clarify. I was figuring about $10k for materials not counting any concrete based on what I've seen for free standing garage prices. Hadn't thought about the footing but I think you could dig the footing around the parking slab there's room to get to it with a backhoe. The plan would be to basically cover up a parking spot that's been poured on the exterior of my current garage and just tie that into the existing structure. The way the wall is laid out load bearing walls would be extended, not removed. I would remove an exterior wall but it runs parallel with the rafters. I've considered doing the work myself but I just don't have the time to do it.