Lol yep. I park a car in mine and my wife gets a spot also. No way would I banish her car to the outside. Unfortunately my 3rd car has to live outside.
Good luck with that, but I hear ya - unless you are getting a custom-built home the standard 2 car garage in most tract developments is going to be around the 20-22" range in each dimension. More space = more $$ on the builder for materials. Our 2005-era home (we are the second owners) with a 2-car garage came with one measly GFCI outlet, one light fixture, and one garage door opener. How's that for cutting costs lol!
@@progression_decibel I am well aware of what the "standard" is, doesn't mean it's right...but most folks don't even park a car in the garage these days, it just accumulates more junk they rarely if ever use.
@@ts6141 Ain't that the truth. I see a lot of my neighbors' garages with so much junk, quite baffling where they get it all from lol! Our garage will be the envy; I'm super excited to Obsess-ify ours very soon!
So true, I have a 24" x 24" 2.5 car garage and I put an array of cabinets on the back-wall, a work bench, a windows, some good lights and bought swiss-trax off you guys a few years back. Even to this day, my neighbors are blown away when they walk by when I have it opened up and am tinkering around out there. Didn't have to put too much into it, albeit prices now are consistently ~ double what they were back in 2016 when I built mine out...at that time I put less than 5k into getting all that done!
Nope. Parking a car outside to make room for more detailing products is nonsensical to me. Decreasing car space for more tool space is basic, and doesn't require design. I would much prefer to see the work that goes into designing storage around 2 cars.
Very nice well done and now you know way you guys are Above and apart from the rest. Because you don't only think of the big mass of garages you. So take any consideration the economy size garage
I have a 20x20 with a small 5x8 alcove off the back to one side where my water heater, air compressor, tool box and work bench lives. Then I have a 2’x4’ shelving unit at the back center, and some shelves along one side. I can barely fit one tall cabinet and wall mounted PW and hose reel, and I can barely fit my Miata and wife’s CX5 in there. I have so much junk all crammed in there. Wish I could fit more cabinets or bigger tool box, but there’s just no space. 3rd car lives outside. I need a 3 car garage house or a house with room for a detached garage shop, so badly.
Luckily my apartment garage is generously sized at 21' x 10.5' where I can fit a 2.5' deep boltless shelving rack on the back wall for detail supply totes, a work bench and a place to stow away buckets and a cart below. This garage provides 2.5' of workspace on three sides of the vehicle for detailing. Besides cabinets I believe OG should consider boltless racks as a basic solution for garages and RiveTier has been the best customizable solution for both of my garages as well as the shop plus they're comparable to what is used in the OG warehouse.
Check out Rousseau's Spider Shelving System. It's more of a rack style system but can have doors and sides if you want. Very customizable size wise too. We're a dealer now.
Revit is great for architects and building something from nothing. For our workflow CAP handles a product library so much better. I don’t need to build items from scratch, I just want to be able to drop items in from the library super easily which is why we use CAP.
@@kylehenderson1402 yeah I get the reasoning. Just the interface looks so much older. I’ve gotten used to the ribbon type of interface in most programs now.
Kyle this was FANTASTIC. The details were perfect. I am working on a layout now and will definitely leverage everything you shared. Your work is amazing.
I like Benjamin Moore Silver Chain AC-25 in Flat. Ceiling in Sherwin Williams Pure White in Flat. Trim in Sherwin Williams Pure White in Semi-Gloss. I don't like black on any wall in any room.