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Garage Addition: Top Features

By
Real Estate Broker/Owner with Magdalena Dokic BK 3126272

If you want to build a garage addition that won't break the bank, don’t go overboard on creating a showcase car barn. With a little planning, you can add smart, useful details that maximize the benefit you’ll get from a basic garage addition without adding too much to the price tag. Here are some great ideas for low-cost garages:

Layout and Design

Roof: Most garage roofs are held up by standard trusses. They're economical -- about $88 each in a length that spans a two-car garage -- but their design blocks the storage space you'd otherwise have in the attic. For just $25 more per truss, a total upgrade of about $350, you can switch to storage trusses, which are open in the middle. Or, for an upgrade of about $1,000, you can get attic trusses, which allow for a boxed-in upstairs that's easy to outfit with shelves or even use as a bonus room.  

Doors: Some garage plans provide for only the main car door and, in attached garages, a door into the house. You'll be happier if you put in a standard door to your yard as well, so you can retrieve a rake without opening the overhead door. A basic pre-hung steel door costs around $140; add $40 for one with a window.

Windows: Try to include windows, which make the exterior more appealing and bring in natural light. That's something you'll appreciate, especially if you're planning to use part of the garage as a workshop. Generously sized vinyl windows with insulated glass start at around $120.

Floor space: If you have room, build the garage wide enough to allow 4 or 5 feet of space between the car and the walls, which gives you clearance to open the doors plus plenty of easily accessed storage. Adding 2 feet to the width significantly increases usable space but may not add dramatically to the cost.

Storage Solutions

If you want to keep costs in line, keep storage solutions simple. Inexpensive ($50 to $150) metal or plastic storage shelves have adjustable shelving and come in a variety of sizes so you can fit them where you have the room. Or, if your garage has walls 12 or 13 feet high, you can use a few two-by-fours and sheets of 3/4-inch plywood to build a platform about 6 feet high over part of your parking area to store sports gear, holiday decorations, and other bulky things.

Workspace

If you want a small home workshop on the back wall, a simple 2-foot-deep countertop (standard kitchen depth) makes a good workbench, especially if you add a vise. For storage, recycle used kitchen cabinets, found through online listings or stores that sell used building materials. Or you can simply use the under-counter space to roll in boxes or bins on casters. You can also mount heavy tools on rollout stands.

Power and Lighting

You'll need to run electricity to your new garage. If the garage is detached, that probably means adding a 100-amp breaker on the house's main panel, a trench to carry conduit to the garage, and a new sub-panel there. You'll need circuits for outlets, interior and exterior lights, and an automatic door opener. You might want motion or daylight sensors for outside lights and a three-way switch for overhead fixtures so you can turn them on and off at different doors.

For general lighting, use energy-efficient fluorescent tubes; fixtures with 4-foot bulbs and plastic covers cost about $55 each. You need at least one over each car bay. For bright light throughout a two-car garage, use nine fixtures spaced evenly in three rows.

Walls and Floors

To meet fire code with an attached garage, you'll need to install 5/8-inch-thick drywall on the wall shared with the house, and a fire-rated door. Installing drywall in the rest of the garage is optional.

Figure about $1.20 per square foot to install drywall, including taping and finishing; double that if you also want the walls primed and painted. If you want a finished look on the concrete floor, options include an epoxy coating (about $150 per car bay if you do the job yourself) or garage floor tiles. Those made of a rubber-polypropylene mix, such as Diamondtrax (about $4 per square foot), ease strain on your legs and feet, while tiles with small perforations, like the ones made by Tylon (about $2.50 per square foot), allow mud and water to drain through.

Posted by

Maggie Dokic - Broker/Owner - Special Miami Homes

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