Sunday, October 15, 2017

Hick's Freight Container Garage Progress

The road to the freight container garage has been a long one. In fact, there's not even a real road to it. This newest Hick project is located on the 10 acres next to our house and BARn 10 acres. We added it later, when the owners were finally willing to sell. Hick bought the freight containers a few years ago, with this garage in mind. It was such a good deal he couldn't pass it up. So they've been sitting over there, hidden by trees, slowly filling with junk.

The first thing you need to build a freight container garage (after the freight containers, of course) is a foundation. Concrete work is surprisingly expensive! It will be half the cost of the whole project. The next thing you need is a crane.


A crane is not nearly as expensive as you might think. At least to me. I thought this one was a steal at $300. He charged by the job, not the hour. I think he was here 3-4 hours or less. He DID have to wait for Hick and HOS to unload the freight containers of junk so his crane could lift them.

This was accomplished by running straps under the freight containers, with Hick and HOS guiding the containers into place on their concrete foundation. This is Hick. I can tell by the overalls.


It seems like dangerous work to me, but HOS was up to the task. I guess the crane guy knew what he was doing, but the makeshift platform and tires in the air look a bit perilous for my tastes.


Hick and HOS made sure the placement was exactly right before giving the OK to the crane man. It's not like they could push it over a skosh later, once he had gone.


Satisfied, they unstrapped the freight container. It's not going anywhere any more. Jack and Juno are exhausted from all the hard work. In the background, you can see a couple of lights that Hick will eventually hang. He has plenty, after hauling home 25 or 50 (you don't think I listen to him, do you) from work right before he left, that were being thrown away.


With the freight containers in place, they were just waiting for the concrete guys to find a day in their busy schedule to come back and pour the garage floor. This is from the back side. If you look under the left freight container, you can see a sliver of the gravel road.


The floor made it look more like it may one day become an actual garage. The plan is to put trusses over the top, close it in, and have a garage for working on cars, where Hick plans to rebuild his old '67 Chevy pickup truck. The freight containers themselves will be used for storage.


Hick bought a used lift from some guy HOS knows. It cost slightly more than the trusses, but only about 1/5 of the concrete fee. He borrowed a concrete drill from our across-the-road neighbor to anchor it to the floor. Of course Hick has a concrete drill, but he said his isn't long enough. I'm just glad he didn't decide he had to buy one!


Looks like Hick and HOS had to sit a spell and admire their handiwork. The dogs decided they needed a break, too.


Jack hit the bottle pretty hard. Juno was not about to refuse a beverage. She looks like an old lush.


Once the trusses are built and delivered and put on...I'm pretty sure there will be more pictures.

13 comments:

  1. I'm just curious. What will become of all this when you and Hick are gone ... far into the future, I'm sure . . . but just sayin' . . .

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    1. I don't think it will spontaneously crumble into dust! It will remain, packed to the gills with Hick's treasures, for Genius, the executor of our estate, to deal with.

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  2. Doesn't everyone have a concrete drill? $300 for a crane and operator for the day does sound like a good price.

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    1. Probably. But how many of you admit that yours isn't long enough?

      I think Hick must some special connections in the construction business. Except for concrete work.

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    2. I was going to answer your question, but it turns out I do in fact have a filter.

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  3. Looks like quite the project, that's going to be nice when he gets it all finished, good idea bringing those lights home too.

    I'd keep an eye on those dogs, they do seem to be seriously hitting the bottle.

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    1. Hick was astounded that the lights were being thrown away. "I couldn't let that happen!" He figures he can sell the ones he doesn't use. He's getting a booth at a local flea market as soon as one is available.

      The dogs needed to let their hair down after such a stressful day. It was 5:00 somewhere.

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  4. It's looking really good so far. I assumed there would be solid concrete under the freight containers, but of course there doesn't need to be. I know how expensive concrete can be, I have a son in law who works in concrete.

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    1. I don't think the checkbook could handle concrete UNDER the freight containers, too. Hick is lucky he's getting a roof. In fact, he changed the configuration of the trusses, and cut that cost in half.

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  5. Another day, another building!!

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  6. It looks like you're building a village.

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