I've been working on a little workshop for myself at my house. This will allow me to get most of my tools out of the basement and free up a room in the house. My house is 105 years old. It has a detached garage[SIZE=11pt]—[/SIZE]also 105 years old[SIZE=11pt]—[/SIZE]measuring 9'x18' that is too small for a car. The garage was built for a Model A sized car. I've done several little "projects" so far to build out this workshop. Here are five projects I've completed over the past couple months:
Walk-in Door: I knocked a door width hold in the brick wall and took out one bay of a three-bay window to put in a walk-in door. This eliminates the hassle of lifting up the garage door to enter and exit the workshop.
Hardwood Floor: I had bunch of short floor plank scraps left over from a large (25'x65') hardwood floor I installed a couple years ago. So I used a bunch of these scraps to install a hardwood floor in my little home workshop. They're free! I put 3/4" treated layer of OSB underneath, between the flooring planks and the concrete floor. I'll put the third layer of polyurethane on the floor soon[SIZE=11pt]—[/SIZE]maybe tonight. (I put the 2nd layer on a couple weeks ago[SIZE=11pt]—[/SIZE]but thought I better get a 3rd layer on before I start putting stuff in the room.)
Motorcycle Turntable: I installed a 27" diameter turntable in the center of the floor[SIZE=11pt]—[/SIZE]level with the rest of the floor. This way I can position the center stand of my Kawasaki 1100 on the turntable and turn the bike around in the shop. The turntable is made from two pieces of 3/16" plate steel with spray silicone lubricant in between them. With the bike sitting on its center stand, I can lift the front of it with two fingers of each hand and rotate it around.
Shop Bench: I spent a lot of time designing and building a shop bench. It's sturdy as hell! I just got done with it yesterday. I installed it directly into the two remaining bay windows (south facing) so I'll have good light. It extends into the room about a foot or so. I used 3/4" plywood for the bench surface, and polyurethaned it to make it look sharp. I covered the plywood edges with strips of oak from the flooring. (I had a couple of long pieces left.) I installed a vintage Chas. Parker 23X bench vise on the bench. I have another vintage carpenter's vice that I'll install at some point at the other end of the bench.
Wood stove: The garage had a half chimney extending halfway down with back wall from the ceiling with a port to feed a pot belly stove duct into. I bought a Fisher Mama Bear wood stove from a friend. Damned thing weighs around 400 lbs.! Rather than having the wood stove sit directly over the hardwood floor, I left a 3'x4' bare concrete space in the floor where I didn't put hardwood flooring planks. I laid some large profile, thin bricks in this "hole" in the flooring so it'll be the same level as the flooring. The bricks sit loosely on the concrete floor, and the Mama Bear sits on the bricks.
Once I get the 3rd coat of poly on the floor I'll start moving tools in: radial arm saw, bandsaw, mig welder, anvil, drill press, router table, etc. I'm also going to build a small (very small) "room" attached to the outside of the workshop to house my air compressor. It's just too damn loud to have inside the workshop. I'll run an air-line through brick wall so I can have air in the shop[SIZE=11pt]—without the noise of the compressor[/SIZE].
Edit: Just laid down the 3rd coat of polyurethane on the back half this morning. I had to move all the stuff I have in the room already to the front half to finish the floor coating (pic below).