I sold the camaro, and we are picking up a new car for the wife in the next week or two when we get hers back, so I turned my attention to the garage. Which is her parking spot. Plan is to renovate the entire house. Started in the garage for the new car. Then its on to making a baby room.
House is old, have it back to 1912, and have the lot with a structure (not sure if its this house or not) back to 1886. It goes back farther than that because the deed i have references an earlier sale, but it isnt legible. I researched pretty heavily for about a week and lost the trail. Ill probably get back into it at a later time.
Anyways we both like old houses so the plan it do keep many of the old details and replace them where theyve been removed or updated. When I was going to redo the garage, I figured I needed to dress it up a little, most people come in through the garage which was just drywall and paint right into the dining room, which is wood floors, tin ceiling and old trim, I wanted to carry the old theme into the garage.
First step was to fix the terrible pad. It had a previous patch with grout, and it looked pretty bad. I got all the grout out, and cleaned up the cracks a little.
It looks bad guys but its just an add on garage the house is pier and beam.
I used polymer concrete which will bond to the old concrete, then recapped the low spots.
Its not perfectly flat or smooth, and you could seem some grinder marks in it but its vastly better.
The plan was to do a couple different brownish colors to have a woodish look.
Started cutting in the corners
Then i realized Id have 6 inches of brown painted concrete outside the garage door and I couldnt get over it. So I just went a blue gray like it was originally painted. I still have the 6 inches outside but its close enought to the color of cement it doesnt stick out like crazy.
Like i said its not perfect but it will mostly be covered with a rug
Next thing was to address the terribly ugly shelf. I planned on rebuilding it. Then i noticed it goes into te ceiling and ties into the rafters and didnt feel like messing with that, so I tried to figure out a way to dress it up. I needed to hide all the terrible bracing and just random 2x4s and 1x4s messily hammered together. I decided to just put a new face on it. Figured out a crafstman/colonial revival style.
I forgot to take a before picture. The closest thing is me putting the bottom boards and plinths on.
After. Its primed and not painted. Ill paint it when I paint the rest.
I think the design is okish but I made a miscalculation. I think on a colonial revival or craftsman it would more likely be stained wood. This is just a crappy shelf so I went as cheap as possible and did a combination of common board, mdf, and plastic cove molding, which means it had to be painted. Painted I think it will look more greek revival. Whatever I think its a big improvement.
I still need to do the crown molding but Ill do that when I do the rest of the garage.
Next step is some drywall and tape repair. Plans are to do a work bench and some built ins on the right side, built a window treatment for the window, and wainscoting on the back wall, and paint. Current color choice is a evergreen fog, with white trim. like dis
Im going to have to do a test spot because I want more color and less grey.