Building a Garage Addition to Your Home
One of the most rewarding home improvements I made to my house
was to build a garage addition. For years I contemplated
building a garage addition while I scraped the ice and snow from
my cars and waited for them to warm up during the winter months.
About 5 years ago I finally made the decision to build a garage
onto my home.
The first big decision I had to make after deciding to build the
garage addition was to determine how large to make it. I wanted
a large enough garage to fit two cars comfortably and that would
be of proper proportion with the rest of the house. I also
wanted space to include a work bench and to allow room for the
lawnmowers or snow blowers. I decided on a 26 foot wide, by 24
foot deep garage. Since my house was 36 feet in width, this gave
me a garage that was about 2/5ths of the entire home frontage.
I also needed to make sure that the roof pitch and the elevation
of the garage would be consistent with the rest of the home.
After taking these issues into account, I created some drawings
of the garage including: the foundation size, the location of
the garage doors, the maintenance door and windows, and the
height profile of the roof. From these drawings I was able to
discuss with a number of general contractors my garage and home
plans.
After selecting my general contractor, I generated some
additional drawings that provided all of the framing details
necessary to pull a building permit. Because of the specific
contour of my property, my garage plans also included a bonus
room that would reside above the garage. Thus, I needed to
include additional drawings of the bonus room, e.g. interior
walls, doors, windows, closet, and entrance way and stairwell
to/from the main house.
After excavation and installation of the foundation, the framing
crew had the garage frame up in about a week. Three weeks later
I had a completely enclosed garage, with all the outside doors
and windows installed and the shingles installed on the roof.
>From this point forward, I took over the electrical and
insulation work, after filing for these specific permits.
Once the insulation was installed and approved, I called in the
drywall contractor to install the drywall, and to tape and mud.
I also had them apply a coat of primer and one coat of builders
grade paint. It is well worth the money to have them do this.
I then finished the electric, installed the stair railing,
interior doors and baseboard trim and the garage was nearly
ready to move in.
The finishing touch was the installation of two garage door
openers and a final application of paint in the bonus room.
The total cost of my garage addition was about $30,000. I had
been quoted as high as $50,000, however with a little
negotiation and sweat equity I was able to get a lot of garage
for a reasonable price.
A few years have gone by since I completed my garage addition
and every winter when I see people standing by their cars in the
driveways scraping, I am reminded of one of the best decisions I
ever made.