A little over a year ago, my dad finally retired when he found someone to buy the building his business was in. He designed and sold kitchens and in the back he had a decent-sized steel building that was outfitted as a woodworking shop with some pretty decent tools. Whenever we had a wood-like project to work on, we'd just take it out there and use that space since there was plenty of room, tools, a bathroom, and heat. The whole deal came together kind of fast, so we didn't have a lot of time to figure things out, but we wanted to save the tools and come up with a place to use them since neither of us has enough basement, garage, or back yard for it. I already had a 10x30 storage garage that I kept some household stull and the trailer in so we rented the one next door with a promise that the owner would take down the dividing wall and we could pay to have a 240V circuit run to the unit. I started with this:
And we turned it into this:
The astute among you will notice that there is still a wall between the two units. This made the space pretty difficult to use, since the table saw and its outfeed table (which is also the main workbench) takes up most of the open space, leaving only a small place to squeeze through. The space on the left for automotive work is also tight, making it kind of a one-person workshop. But, for the money it wasn't a bad deal for 600 sq ft of space with included electric and security. When the owner of the lot was opening up a new location, we went and looked at the new units. He initially offered us 2 12x30 garages with the wall removed, but then came back and said he could only give us 10 foot of "open space" in the front and the wall would have to remain through the other 20 feet. We could have done a 12x60 and we thought about that, but that still would have been pretty tight. As we mulled that over, I found a guy with some light industrial space available not far away for a relatively reasonable monthly rent.
The storage locker worked okay, but we lacked the electric that we really needed -- the 240 circuit was going to cost about $1,400 to install, so we never did -- plus there was no insulation, no heat, no water, and the only bathroom was a port-o-let about 100 yards away. The new place has a 12x12 garage door, is nominally 20x70, has insulation, a gas furnace, a little office space, all the power we need, and its own bathroom.
We got the keys last Saturday and started moving in this week. As a bonus, right before we went to hand over the check and get the keys, the landlady called and told me that the large 8x4x12 shelving unit that was in there needed a home. I was expecting her to give me a price for us to buy it from the previous tenant, but when she told me that she just wanted to know if it was okay with us for him to leave it behind, I said "SOLD!", so free shelves!
We've got most of the stuff moved over. It's actually been a pretty pleasant move since we can bring the truck and trailer inside to unload while shielded from the elements:
So far, we have most of the things from the old place moved in - most of the tools, 32ft worth of sturdy shelving (16ft of which we didn't have room for at the old place and 8ft of which we haven't decided where to place yet!), all the various bins of stuff that still haven't been unpacked from the initial move. Still to go are the table saw and the outfeed table as well as some tires, lumber, saw horses, and other miscellaneous stuff. That should be one more trailer/truck load. Then we can go through the process of getting things unpacked for real and organized. We were under a lot of pressure, both time and emotional, to get things packed up when we were clearing out dad's shop, so there are bins that are like the one that has (not making this up) some wood dowels, a can of belt dressing, some drywall anchors, a ratchet strap, a tub of spackle, a tub of wood putty, and a hardware store baggie of random screws and bolts. Organizing some of that will be made easier since my brother has a friend that owns a jewelry shop who gave him these:
(yeah, I don't know why the picture is sideways...)
I think we're going to build a cart to put them so that they're three-high, back-to-back and then put a worktop with a little ledge on top. That's a mantra that we've been discussing over the last couple days - putting everything on wheels. We're even looking at some options to put retractable wheels on the table saw and the outfeed table. You want to be able to feed an 8' sheet into the saw, which means you need to have 9' of clear space behind the edge of the blade. It weighs about 500 pounds, so our previous mantra was to place the saw and build the shop around it. Discussions over whisky the other night, however, led us to the realization that if we can mount the saw on retractable wheels, we can place it elsewhere for "normal" use and/or storage and then slide it out to the middle of the shop when we need to actually cut that sort of thing. Being able to roll that around will open up a ton of floor space for doing whatever we need to do.
There is a fairly significant cost difference to this new space - not just in rent, but in utilities as well (which are more expensive being designated as "commercial"). We considered taking on a third partner to help defer the costs, but in the end decided that wasn't the best option. My plan right now is to use this space to dismantle cars and part them out to generate just enough income to defer the increase in costs. If we can make more than a break-even number of the increase, then we can apply that to either the entire shop cost and/or use it to fund additional equipment for the shop (like a lift!). So far, just with some old motorcycle and PT Cruiser parts that I had stashed in the garage at home that I was going to throw away anyway, I've already netted enough to pay for the first month's delta and I'm on my way to the second month.