Heavy Duty Garage Shelving
Posted: Mon Feb 25, 2013 2:48 pm
I'm trying to start thinking and planning out my garage shelving and workbench now to keep me motivated on putting my 10ER in service sooner rather than later. That is the reason I am working on the SS, and having a goal in mind and peer pressure are both good motivators.
The high level plan I'm thinking is to build the whole way down one wall of my garage which is exposed studs w approx 1ft concrete footer. The left portion would be a long work table with pegboard behind it. Need to add some outlets and lighting on that side. Where the garage door frame ends there is a window, and from that point to the back wall will be shelving. I would like the shelving dimensions keyed around the large (knee high) totes, 4 totes high along with some smaller storage. The roofline comes down at the back of the garage fairly steeply and the back wall is a little under 6' high.
That's as far as I have gotten. No idea yet on lumber dimensions, type of wood, types of joints, etc. I'm going to have fairly heavy loads - vehicle parts and equipment. No ceiling, open rafters, built in the 1930's with rough cut cedar. Stays dry for the most part, except for the floor around the window and door during bad storms but nothing major.
Any ideas, suggestions, etc. are more than welcome.
The high level plan I'm thinking is to build the whole way down one wall of my garage which is exposed studs w approx 1ft concrete footer. The left portion would be a long work table with pegboard behind it. Need to add some outlets and lighting on that side. Where the garage door frame ends there is a window, and from that point to the back wall will be shelving. I would like the shelving dimensions keyed around the large (knee high) totes, 4 totes high along with some smaller storage. The roofline comes down at the back of the garage fairly steeply and the back wall is a little under 6' high.
That's as far as I have gotten. No idea yet on lumber dimensions, type of wood, types of joints, etc. I'm going to have fairly heavy loads - vehicle parts and equipment. No ceiling, open rafters, built in the 1930's with rough cut cedar. Stays dry for the most part, except for the floor around the window and door during bad storms but nothing major.
Any ideas, suggestions, etc. are more than welcome.