Did you slope the floor toward the drain?
Obed
Yes, I can't imagine not being there to check on things. Hopefully your wife can be your eyes. Fortunately for me, my wife checks things pretty closely while our house is being built.Obed - This was a concern of mine as well. I'm currently working overseas so at a disadvantage of not directly supervising the work - not the best scenario. However, I spoke at great lengths with my 2 subs (concrete and block) about what I wanted before I left.
The pictures don't show much slope, so I had the wife double check and they do slope in towards the drain. I'm fortunate the subs seem to have been doing a good job thus far to the specs we had discussed.
I just didn't want to waste a good month of building time while I'm away, I want to be in the garage before the snow flies!
Yes, I can't imagine not being there to check on things. Hopefully your wife can be your eyes. Fortunately for me, my wife checks things pretty closely while our house is being built.
Also, I concur with your decision to put a door from the attic that opens to the grade. Making a ladder to the attic sounds like a smart way to conserve floor space; that's a common solution in barns. You might also consider using pull-down steps. We put them in our garage in order to access the attic above. That way the steps only temporarilly occupy floor space and even then the space needed is much less than real stairs would take. If you do the pull down steps, you'll need to space the trusses so that the steps will fit between the trusses. We spaced two of the trusses at 24" instead of the normal 19.2" so that our 24" wide pull down steps would fit between the trusses. Either way, you will need to make sure the trusses will accommodate pull down steps or the ladder that you mentioned.
Obed
If you do this, make sure that the gutter drains are tied in downstream of the footer drains - otherwise you will potentially be injecting large amounts of surface water into the subsurface soils around your foundation.Footer drains are already in, and gutter drains will be tied into same.
If you do this, make sure that the gutter drains are tied in downstream of the footer drains - otherwise you will potentially be injecting large amounts of surface water into the subsurface soils around your foundation.
Ideally, downspouts would run in their own "tightline" to daylight, so that there is no possibility of the above.
scout, when I see those bottom plates, I'm wanting to frame it on up with walls! If foundation is strong enough, that would make a great two story place - maybe you already said you plan to do that in other thread on this post, but I might have missed it if you did.
We had to get the truss designer from the building supply company to verify that we could spread two trusses far enough apart, 24" between the trusses, not 24" O.C., in order to fit the the 24" wide steps between them. We added some extra blocking between the two trusses where there is subfloor (not steps) for support because the subfloor was sitting on trusses more than 24" O.C. apart. I'm not concerned that we materially weakened the structural integrety.Obed -
Great idea, I had completely forgotten about the pull down steps. The last 2 houses I've owned, I've built steps into a "bonus room" above the garage, and a "catwalk storage" in my last garage. The ceiling height was 13', so I built a second level with 6' of clearance above.
For this garage, I think the pull down stairs would be the best. It will also seal the space for winter heating. What I've seen before is actually framing a box between the trusses to accommodate the stairs, do you think that would weaken the integrity of the trusses?
For the staggered truss spacing, that didn't introduce any other problems?
Scoutcub,If you do this, make sure that the gutter drains are tied in downstream of the footer drains - otherwise you will potentially be injecting large amounts of surface water into the subsurface soils around your foundation.
Ideally, downspouts would run in their own "tightline" to daylight, so that there is no possibility of the above.
If you do this, make sure that the gutter drains are tied in downstream of the footer drains - otherwise you will potentially be injecting large amounts of surface water into the subsurface soils around your foundation.
Ideally, downspouts would run in their own "tightline" to daylight, so that there is no possibility of the above.
For us, getting the roof rafters, sheathing, and foofing felt on the house was a big milestone that came with some emotional relief. Looks like you're getting close to that point. Huray!Trusses have arrived! Interesting how they were stacked upside down on a custom lumber trailer, and my steep driveway must've been fun for the driver!