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Author Where to place shed door?
al

2007-06-28, 1:25 pm

Door is going to be on the 10 foot wall of a 10x8 shed. Are there any
practical considerations as to whether it's in the center of the wall
or offset to the side almost to the end of the wall? Would one
cofiguration result in a better use of available space? Thanks...

Norminn

2007-06-28, 1:25 pm

al wrote:
> Door is going to be on the 10 foot wall of a 10x8 shed. Are there any
> practical considerations as to whether it's in the center of the wall
> or offset to the side almost to the end of the wall? Would one
> cofiguration result in a better use of available space? Thanks...
>

Seems it would depend entirely on what you use the space for, what kind
of door and how it opens. If you use it as a shop, you don't want the
door to hit you if someone else enters. If you have a monster lawn
tractor to drive in, then perhaps the door should be at the end where
you park it. Hanging, sliding door might give you more useable space.
Steve

2007-06-28, 1:25 pm

al <alborasso@yahoo.com> wrote on 28 Jun 2007 in group alt.home.repair:

> Door is going to be on the 10 foot wall of a 10x8 shed. Are there any
> practical considerations as to whether it's in the center of the wall
> or offset to the side almost to the end of the wall? Would one
> cofiguration result in a better use of available space? Thanks...


Put it in the middle. If you put it to one side, the 8' wall just in front
of the door is less usable. You'll also have to put a turn in the center
aisle to get to the back corner.

--
Steve B.
New Life Home Improvement
al

2007-06-28, 1:25 pm

Thanks for the comments.

It has a 48" outswing door and will be used for storing garden tools,
push lawnmower, step ladder and assorted other things that have no
place else to go. If there's a hurricane, porch chairs would go in
there.

Stephen M

2007-06-28, 1:25 pm

I have an 8x8 garden shed, soon to be replaced by a 12x22 minibarn. The 48"
door of the shed is centered, and I believe that is the most efficient
arrangement.

FWIW, the minibarn will have a 5' door centered along the long wall, with
"loft" door on one gable end.

IMO, centered is more aesthetically pleasing as well.

-Steve

"al" <alborasso@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1183047044.108695.185700@m36g2000hse.googlegroups.com...
> Door is going to be on the 10 foot wall of a 10x8 shed. Are there any
> practical considerations as to whether it's in the center of the wall
> or offset to the side almost to the end of the wall? Would one
> cofiguration result in a better use of available space? Thanks...
>




--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com

dadiOH

2007-06-28, 1:25 pm

al wrote:
> Door is going to be on the 10 foot wall of a 10x8 shed. Are there
> any practical considerations as to whether it's in the center of
> the wall or offset to the side almost to the end of the wall?
> Would one cofiguration result in a better use of available space?
> Thanks...


In swing or out swing?

--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico



dadiOH

2007-06-28, 1:25 pm

al wrote:
> Thanks for the comments.
>
> It has a 48" outswing door and will be used for storing garden
> tools, push lawnmower, step ladder and assorted other things that
> have no place else to go. If there's a hurricane, porch chairs
> would go in there.


In that case, center.


--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico



DerbyDad03

2007-06-28, 5:25 pm

On 28 Jun, 12:41, al <albora...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> Thanks for the comments.
>
> It has a 48" outswing door and will be used for storing garden tools,
> push lawnmower, step ladder and assorted other things that have no
> place else to go.


- - If there's a hurricane, porch chairs would go in there.

I don't live in hurricane country, but that last statement just sounds
wierd to me. With all the newsclips of hurricane damage that we see,
the visual of you calmly storing your porch chairs as cows, cars and
rooftops go flying past is pretty strange.

I assume that the shed itself will be built to withstand hurricane
force winds. Otherwise, what's the point of storing the chairs in
there?

dpb

2007-06-28, 5:25 pm

DerbyDad03 wrote:
> On 28 Jun, 12:41, al <albora...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> - - If there's a hurricane, porch chairs would go in there.
>
> I don't live in hurricane country, but that last statement just sounds
> wierd to me. With all the newsclips of hurricane damage that we see,
> the visual of you calmly storing your porch chairs as cows, cars and
> rooftops go flying past is pretty strange.
>
> I assume that the shed itself will be built to withstand hurricane
> force winds. Otherwise, what's the point of storing the chairs in
> there?


Perhaps you haven't lived where the wind blows regularly...

It can blow sufficiently hard enough to blow stuff like lawn chairs,
trash cans, etc., around sufficiently that putting them inside is wise
long before even a small shed will actually be destroyed...living in W
KS despite no hurricanes, I can fully comprehend the concept.

--


Smitty Two

2007-06-28, 5:25 pm

In article <1183047044.108695.185700@m36g2000hse.googlegroups.com>,
al <alborasso@yahoo.com> wrote:

> Door is going to be on the 10 foot wall of a 10x8 shed. Are there any
> practical considerations as to whether it's in the center of the wall
> or offset to the side almost to the end of the wall? Would one
> cofiguration result in a better use of available space? Thanks...


I'm pretty happy with my door placement on my 8 x 12 shed. Door starts
two feet from one end of the long wall. That gives me nice shelving
along the short wall near the door, and good storage for a variety of
larger items elsewhere. I think it depends on what you're putting in
there, but I don't think the centered door is as aesthetically pleasing
or as functional for a typical storage shed.
Mortimer Schnerd, RN

2007-06-28, 5:25 pm

al wrote:
> Door is going to be on the 10 foot wall of a 10x8 shed. Are there any
> practical considerations as to whether it's in the center of the wall
> or offset to the side almost to the end of the wall? Would one
> cofiguration result in a better use of available space? Thanks...



Put it over to one side. Then if you have to run a long ladder through the
opening, you can stick more of it inside before you have to swing the back end.
It might make the difference between whether a long item fits inside or doesn't.



--
Mortimer Schnerd, RN
mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com


al

2007-06-28, 5:25 pm

On Jun 28, 2:41 pm, DerbyDad03 <teamarr...@eznet.net> wrote:
> I assume that the shed itself will be built to withstand hurricane
> force winds.


18 gauge G-90 (whatever that is) galvanized steel framing with a wind
loading of 3 second gusts of 150 mph. Wood frame models have T-wall
bracing and hurricane clips and straps from the floor joists to the
roof and everywhere in between. Might be better built than my house.

dpb

2007-06-28, 5:25 pm

al wrote:
> On Jun 28, 2:41 pm, DerbyDad03 <teamarr...@eznet.net> wrote:
>
> 18 gauge G-90 (whatever that is) galvanized steel framing with a wind
> loading of 3 second gusts of 150 mph. Wood frame models have T-wall
> bracing and hurricane clips and straps from the floor joists to the
> roof and everywhere in between. Might be better built than my house.


What keeps the whole thing from just flying away intact, though?

--


Phisherman

2007-06-28, 5:25 pm

On Thu, 28 Jun 2007 09:10:44 -0700, al <alborasso@yahoo.com> wrote:

>Door is going to be on the 10 foot wall of a 10x8 shed. Are there any
>practical considerations as to whether it's in the center of the wall
>or offset to the side almost to the end of the wall? Would one
>cofiguration result in a better use of available space? Thanks...


If your door opens to the outside, it matters little.
HeyBub

2007-06-28, 8:25 pm

DerbyDad03 wrote:
> I don't live in hurricane country, but that last statement just sounds
> wierd to me. With all the newsclips of hurricane damage that we see,
> the visual of you calmly storing your porch chairs as cows, cars and
> rooftops go flying past is pretty strange.


Cows, cars, and the like don't go flying about in a hurricane.

The winds are steady at 74+ mph; one can walk around during a hurricane.
Lawn chairs and trash cans traveling at 80mph, are, however, a hazard.


SteveB

2007-06-28, 8:25 pm

>>Door is going to be on the 10 foot wall of a 10x8 shed. Are there any[color=darkred]

On that size, it really wouldn't matter. Personally, I'd center it on the
ten foot side. This will keep a lot of wall space, and let you have a
straight shot to take items in and out.

Steve


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