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Garage
Conversions to Living Space – Making More Room!
When you need more space and are on a limited budget, you
should look at the possibilities garage conversions to
living space hold for your purposes. The advantage of using
the existing garage is that the basic framing and some of
the wiring is already done. Turning it into living space can
be done for a much more reasonable cost than if you add a
new room to the existing house.
Garage conversions to living space may be done for one of
many purposes. You may have a family that’s growing and need
another bedroom. Some people turn the garage into a family
or hobby room when there’s no general use room in the house.
Other possibilities include expanding the kitchen and dining
room space or creating a home office. More and more people
are working from home and require additional space.
Garage Conversions to Living Space
Since the garage is already framed, it’s fairly easy to
convert it to a different use. The garage already has
electrical wiring and often it has plumbing too. Frequently
the hot water tanks or a sink are in the garage which means
it’s plumbed. All garages have a permanent floor which only
needs to be covered or raised somehow. The only real major
work that is involved is removing the garage door and
filling in the wall so that it’s attached almost seamlessly
to the rest of the house.
To begin your project, first draw up preliminary plans that
show exactly what you plan to do. You will need to get a
licensed plumber and electrician to plan the wiring and
plumbing so it meets building codes. You will take the
remodel plans and any plumbing and electrical plans to the
building department and request a permit. If you hire a
contractor, he or she will be responsible for obtaining the
right permits. Permit rules are different for every county
so check with your local agency concerning requirements to
obtain a permit.
Once you have the permit, you’re ready to start garage
conversions to living space. Of course, the garage door has
to be removed and the outside wall finished first. Then you
can build up the floor so you aren’t walking on carpet over
concrete. If the room is going to be used as a studio or
office, you can use tile or indoor/outdoor carpet laid over
concrete with the proper adhesive if you wish. The next step
is to frame in any walls that are needed such as bathroom
walls.
After you decide what to do with the flooring, and walls are
framed, you can get the rough plumbing and electrical work
completed. This is the plumbing and wiring that leads to the
walls. When it’s time to connect bathroom appliances or hang
lights it’s called finish plumbing and electrical. After
that you can sheetrock, paint, lay the flooring you chose,
hook up bathroom appliances and so on. In some jobs,
something might have to be done to create a more formal
access from the new room to the old house. |
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Home
Remodeling Tips and Home improvement Ideas |
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