Anyone built their own garage?
- -Holiday
- Legendary 1500
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Anyone built their own garage?
What did it cost roughly? Did you contract any parts out? How big was it?
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- dr_bar
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Re: Anyone built their own garage?
Check out these babies...-Holiday wrote:What did it cost roughly? Did you contract any parts out? How big was it?
http://www.futuresteel.com/garages.html
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- Nibblet99
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Re: Anyone built their own garage?
dr_bar wrote:Check out these babies...-Holiday wrote:What did it cost roughly? Did you contract any parts out? How big was it?
http://www.futuresteel.com/garages.html
functional...... horrific, but... well functional ...... I guess
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Hmmm? Do you consider a 25x50 insulated metal building a garage? I suppose it could be, considering there are insulated roll-up doors on each end. Slab is 6 inches of steel-reinforced 5000psi concrete. Electric included four double strip 8-foot flourescent lights and an electrical outlet on each end of the building. Plumbing included a tie in to the existing meter on the property and a single 1-inch PVC pipe to a utility sink, then a 4-inch drain back to the existing sewer tap, and fire sprinklers. Maybe $13,500 up front. Friends and I did all the labor.
The city charged $475 for permit fees and inspections, along with $800 just to turn the water on, which was kind of a ripoff because the land had a house that burned down, so I didn't have to pay for the tie-ins for water or sewer. The electric company has a "formula" for determining deposits for service and it came out to $625. That is on top of the $1000 fee to have their electrician drop a wire in a ditch and plug in a meter. I had to dig the ditch. Kind of sucks since my highest electric bill ever has been $60. $720 worth of road base was required to run a drive from the road to the front of the building, where it expands to 50 feet wide for parking. A curved drive extends off each end of the building to connect the overhead doors to the parking area.
Once the building inspections were completed, I went back and added full hook-ups for my RV, 240V circuits for screenprinting equipment, air compressor, welder, and hot water heater, washer and dryer, and 20amp outlets for power tools all around the perimeter. If I remember right, those materials came to about $700.
The city charged $475 for permit fees and inspections, along with $800 just to turn the water on, which was kind of a ripoff because the land had a house that burned down, so I didn't have to pay for the tie-ins for water or sewer. The electric company has a "formula" for determining deposits for service and it came out to $625. That is on top of the $1000 fee to have their electrician drop a wire in a ditch and plug in a meter. I had to dig the ditch. Kind of sucks since my highest electric bill ever has been $60. $720 worth of road base was required to run a drive from the road to the front of the building, where it expands to 50 feet wide for parking. A curved drive extends off each end of the building to connect the overhead doors to the parking area.
Once the building inspections were completed, I went back and added full hook-ups for my RV, 240V circuits for screenprinting equipment, air compressor, welder, and hot water heater, washer and dryer, and 20amp outlets for power tools all around the perimeter. If I remember right, those materials came to about $700.
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