Your Shop Size?

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What square footage do you have for woodworking?

more than 600 Square feet.
38
13%
more than 600 Square feet.
84
29%
more than 600 Square feet.
59
21%
more than 600 Square feet.
45
16%
more than 600 Square feet.
13
5%
more than 600 Square feet.
13
5%
more than 600 Square feet.
35
12%
 
Total votes: 287

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mikelst
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Location: Rowlett, TX
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Post by mikelst »

My shop is an 8'X16' exterior building. With 2x4 insulated walls, that works to 7'4"X15'4" (half inch sheet rock) interior. The 1st floor is just high enough that I can lift the Shopsmith up to drill press mode between the joist's. The upper level is 12' with about 5'4 clearance in the center.

at 8x16 I get 128' so 100 is the nearest I get.
Mike......... Rowlett, Texas, near Dallas
86 MK V 500/520. 59 MK 5 Greenie Shorty. SS Jointer, SS Planer,
SS Bandsaw, SS Lathe duplicator, SS Belt Sander,SS Molder & Shaper,
SS Tenon master jig, SS Mortising kit, SS 2 1/4' Drum Sanders, Ringmaster, DC3300....
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beeg
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Location: St. Louis,Mo.

Post by beeg »

Bringing this forward for the new people.
SS 500(09/1980), DC3300, jointer, bandsaw, belt sander, Strip Sander, drum sanders,molder, dado, biscuit joiner, universal lathe tool rest, Oneway talon chuck, router bits & chucks and a De Walt 735 planer,a #5,#6, block planes. ALL in a 100 square foot shop.
.
.

Bob
8iowa
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Post by 8iowa »

beeg:

Thanks for bringing this up again. This is resulting in some meaningful "statistics".
foxtrapper
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Joined: Fri Feb 16, 2007 10:05 am

Post by foxtrapper »

I get a portion of a small basement. And at that, it shares greasy parts.

I'm always free to work outside! And often times, I do.
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cv3
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Joined: Mon Dec 28, 2009 4:18 pm
Location: Mobile Al

Post by cv3 »

I have a 12’x 16’Shop. It is insulated with a window air unit. It is a good size for what I do. I do wish that I had done 12x20 I would like to have had room for a finishing both.
Make today a day that lets you smile!
CV
Mobile Al.
MARK V 520 - Band saw and Jointer. DeWalt scroll saw.
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S Brian
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Joined: Mon Mar 01, 2010 7:52 pm
Location: South Bend, In

Post by S Brian »

We have a 1,900 sq.ft. ranch style house with a full basement. My basement shop is 12.5' x 28' which gives me 350 sq. ft. I appreciate that it is cool in the summer and warm in the winter, although maintaining our one acre lot leaves little time for summer WW'ing. After 36+ years at my job, I am going to retire at the end of this year, so I am looking forward to purchasing some new equipment and spending more time in The Woodshop Below.:D
Brian
Mark V-500 Purchased New In 1980, SS Bandsaw (free), SS Jointer, SS 6x48 Belt Sander (free), SS Storage Station (free), Powermatic 64A Table Saw, Powermatic 1140F Drill Press, Delta 46-460 Midi-Lathe, Delta Scrollsaw, Bosch 12" Dual Compound Miter Saw, MLCS Router Table w/Bosch Router, Penn State dust collector.
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paulrussell
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Location: Dewitt MI

Post by paulrussell »

Right now I'm in an 11x12 area, about 1/4 of our two-car garage, next to the door. Summer can be too hot in the garage, and Michigan winters too cold.

I'd be working to convert it into a more functional shop if not for the fact my wife is house-hunting, and I might soon have much more room to work with. A little patience might be to my benefit. I've a few books by Nick Engler covering workbenches, shop furniture, tool cabinets and tool stands, and I really like the look of them. If I am going to be spending as much time in my shop as I am hoping and planning, I'd really like to do it up right. Well designed shops look so much more inviting.
Paul

520 PowerPro, Planer, Bandsaw, Jointer, Belt Sander, 20" Scroll Saw, Dust Collector, conical disc
Also: 3D printers, and a homebrew CNC
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riot_nrrd
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Location: Sterling, VA

Post by riot_nrrd »

dusty wrote:My wife, bless her, arranged to have a shed built on the back corner of our property.
My wife was not as happy about, as she puts it, being "banished" to the 12X8 shed I built for her in the back yard. But all she keeps in it is the gardneing supplies, which don't need power. That way, I get most of the 200 sqare foot garage for woodworking and other hobbies. But it is pretty tight, as it also holds the trash and recycling bins, a rolling bin-rack of nails and screws, a rolling tool-chest for all my automotive tools, four racing tires for my Miata, and three sets of wireframe shelves to hold tools, paint, electrical supplies, drywall supplies, and all the miscellaneous pieces of my other hobbies. Plus the shopsmith and its SPTs and a big honking 3ft X 8ft rolling workbench/wood stroage rack I built.

Cozy! But way, way better than nothing.
RiotNrrd

Shopsmith 510 with PowerPro upgrade, Bandsaw, Jointer, Planer, Belt Sander
Incra 1000 HD, Miter Express, TS-III, Wonderfence Other miscellaneous Dewalt, Ryobi, and Craftsman
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dusty
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Location: Tucson (Wildcat Country), Arizona

Post by dusty »

riot_nrrd wrote:My wife was not as happy about, as she puts it, being "banished" to the 12X8 shed I built for her in the back yard. But all she keeps in it is the gardneing supplies, which don't need power. That way, I get most of the 200 sqare foot garage for woodworking and other hobbies. But it is pretty tight, as it also holds the trash and recycling bins, a rolling bin-rack of nails and screws, a rolling tool-chest for all my automotive tools, four racing tires for my Miata, and three sets of wireframe shelves to hold tools, paint, electrical supplies, drywall supplies, and all the miscellaneous pieces of my other hobbies. Plus the shopsmith and its SPTs and a big honking 3ft X 8ft rolling workbench/wood stroage rack I built.

Cozy! But way, way better than nothing.
In the beginning, the shed was for her stuff. The stuff we had collected and she would not part with.

I slowly worked my way into a small corner (for storing some items that were in the way in the shop). I built a nice set of corner shelves to organize my stuff in that small space.

Next I found myself building some shelves so she could get better organized. That was a few years ago. Now she has decided that much of that stuff needs to be distributed to the kids. Hallelujah, the shed will be almost empty.

It could not have worked out better if I had tried. I just may end up with the better part of a 10x12 well heated storage shed.
"Making Sawdust Safely"
Dusty
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paul heller
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Joined: Thu Jul 20, 2006 7:41 pm
Location: Arvada, CO

Post by paul heller »

Great idea to post this poll. 12x14 for me.
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