I never got around to starting a dedicated thread for this, so here it is.
Bought a house recently and moved in about 3 weeks ago.
As with many in this hobby, there was some discussion about the new place having a nice space I could dedicate to showing and playing my cabinets in and also a separate workshop space for ongoing builds and restores.
So, it was decided that I could have the entire double garage to dedicate to my collection and build out into a fun mini sports bar/arcade. For the workshop I would have to have something built.
At the end of our driveway we have a nice brick area, approx 20' x 15' that would be ideal to build a shed/workshop. The only issue was that at one end of the 20' length it is stepped up twice a total of about 10 inches over about 6 feet. So the first part of this build means getting a nice level platform across the full 20'.
We went backwards and forwards on various ideas, concrete slab, wood frame etc etc but decided that we will recycle brick that we have on another area of the property that will be having a deck built on it. The brick in that area would have to be removed for the decking anyway, so we figured we may as well pull it now and use it to match the existing stepped brick area height and have a nice continuous 20' brick area to build the shed on top of.
Once the brick base is finished we'll be going on to build a 12' x 16' dutch style shed with high gambril roof and loft for storage. I was worried about water intrusion from it being built on top of the brick, so we're going to raise the floor on 4x4 pressure treated struts and top it with 3/4 ply.
Front of the shed will be the 16' run and will have double doors opening 6ft in total, either side will be white vinyl windows. Framing will be 16" on center walls with 24" on center rafters.
Not the biggest workshop in the world, but at 192sq/ft it should be enough for me to work on a few projects, and with the loft storage it should prove to be a useful space for my hobbies for the years to come.
Here's the current area. You can see that the stepped area takes up the right hand side.

