Prefabricated garages concrete and steel, current prices?

  • Erstellt am 2023-01-10 23:14:46

rausaufsland

2023-01-11 19:04:44
  • #1
Hello and thank you for the response. I don't quite understand and am curious: what do the submission plans have to do with my garage question? The location of the house and garage are already mentally fixed for us. Currently, the only question for us is which garage type/garage provider we should prefer – given that the price differences apparently have leveled out (or has anyone had different recent experiences?) and given our "modest" requirements. I have now also requested an offer from a Bims garage builder. Best regards and many thanks to the group!
 

11ant

2023-01-11 19:57:53
  • #2

Look around in other threads how far others, who seemed to be close to the finish line in house building, were still able to be helped.

Then show them and let yourself be surprised.

That is exactly the crux: the layman only asks when he realizes that he still has questions (and considers all points successfully settled without question-pain).

The wrong working hypothesis leads to erroneous results. The differences between the various garages are gigantic. In sheet metal, one can simply say that only sheet metal can be safely stored long-term without worry. Sheet metal garages are perfectly sufficient as car garages but inadequately suitable as a cellar substitute room.

Hopefully not expecting a price revelation. The Bims "ready-made" garage impresses with its phenomenal durability, universal suitability as storage space (preservation of the stored goods' value!) and uncomplicated assembly everywhere.
 

rausaufsland

2023-01-11 21:05:10
  • #3


Is the record of steel garages really that dismal, or are you deliberately exaggerating it a bit?

Attached is the plan. Best regards!
 

Costruttrice

2023-01-11 21:29:54
  • #4
We had a steel garage with our first house; due to the narrow wall structure and a special size, we gained a bit more space inside. We were absolutely satisfied for our purposes. However, only cars, bicycles, and a few garden tools were stored in there. I wouldn’t have wanted to put a stroller or suitcases in there; in winter, the steel garage gets very cold (even below freezing, which is why the garden hose was stored in the basement over winter, and leftover paint was also stored in the basement), and in summer very warm. With our neighbors’ precast concrete garage, the temperatures were not as extreme, but they had less space.
 

11ant

2023-01-11 23:39:08
  • #5
A steel garage is purely protection against wind, rain, and sun - okay for cars of all price ranges, not the best choice for other stored goods. I have already stored furniture and books in [Bims], everything was fine, for many years.
 

WilderSueden

2023-01-12 08:58:51
  • #6

Maybe you could also accurately draw the planned interior layout and garage gate position to scale.
I'm a bit skeptical about how you will get the second car in with the paved area and the trash bins and comfortably get in/out. That seems quite tight to me. The exit to the street is in the middle-left, right?

How is it actually with condensation water in steel garages? As bad as it's sometimes said to be?
 
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