Forum Discussion
- padredwNomadHere is my very simple storage shed. It is attaced to our garage and has water, sewer, and electrical connections. The best part is that we just drive through--our road makes a full loop.
It was an "add on" to the garage plans. I will just mention that the posts which are buried in several feet of concrete were a solution to the problem of stability.
It's not pretty, but it works. The only problem is that it was designed around an earlier and slightly smaller fifth-wheel so we do not have full access to all the slide outs. - CampinghossExplorer III had a 41x38 foot 19 feet high in center metal bldg put in. It holds my fifth wheel, bass boat, jeep and my son's 36 foot travel trailer with no problem. I only keep my son's for him during the winter since he has restrictions where he lives on RV's. I chose to leave both ends open so I can drive thru which really helps.
You can research all types of RV sheds on the internet. - GemstoneExplorer
- stetwoodExplorerMy shed is multipurpose. It is 42 x 64. A portion of it is a 28x40 heated shop, the rest is gravel and storage for 30'ft 5ver, crew cab long box. Lawn & snow equipment, lumber storage for woodworking and fishing boat. It only needs to be larger because the kid wants to store things here too.
- SpoiledRottenExplorerI just ordered on of those metal sheds for my pad. I have a 20x40 pad, electricity, septic system, satellite TV, water supply, but leaving it on that pad unprotected from the weather had taken a toll on the roof and graphics, so after 4 years, I decided to put the shed over the whole pad. Hopefully, this will be a welcomed addition. We are adding partial walls down the back and one side where the afternoon sun is the worst. The side posts are 12', then the where it starts the roof, it goes up another foot before starting the horizontal climb to a 14.8' center.
- glazierExplorer II
sunnybrooktoyhauler wrote:
Hi! I put up a 30x44 pole barn. 2 12x14 overhead doors. 16 ft ceiling. Poured concete floor with electric plug 50 amp service. Wish I had a dump station but sceptic was to far. My 5er is 40 ft an I have a foot on front and a foot in back. Do yourself a favor and build it big enough that you can leave the TV hooked up. Good luck.
X2 on the long enough to leave TV hooked up. My RV Garage is 30' x 80' x 16' Height, with 2-16' x 14' Garage Doors (one on each end). I am very pleased with this building's size for storing my Fifth Wheel, and a few other toys. No problem opening all slides, and plenty of room to extend the awning. I always open everything up while in the garage, it allows the awning to dry also. - arnko37ExplorerI had a MH w/ a small solar panel on the roof to keep the batteries charged. The first winter I did not plug the rig in and the batteries went dead, froze and cracked. Solar panels don't work good in the dark.
- jamwayExplorer
crmackenzie wrote:
Does anyone know of where to find plans for building RV garage, covers,storage sheds, parking pads, or houses with attached RV garage?
http://www.muellerinc.com/
Just tell them what you want. Don't tell them how much money you have. LOL - 45RicochetExplorer
Napria wrote:
We are also looking to build something for a 40' fiver. Do you feel you built the right size? Do you slide out your slide outs in your pole barn?
Well looking back now I wish I had changed a few things like:
I got it to close to the bigger building, roof snow shed gets pretty tall between the two and the passenger door can't be used in winter. Also have a killer blind side backing it in.
It is about the right size, but bigger would have been better. I would have needed to take out about a dozen trees and bring in a excavator to level out the mountain. So I just worked with what level land there was so to speak.
It's 16x40 with a 14' door and slides extend but I rarely extend them inside. I have about 2' walking distance on front and back.
In the end it does what I wanted, keep the snow off in winter and sun off it in summer. - Dayle1Explorer IIMy RV garage is 18x44 with a 14x14 sectional door. The 18 ft width allows opposing slides to be open with just enough room to walk around the RV. The 14 ft wide door makes backing in EZ as I had no option for a drive thru layout. Didn't use skylights as they add too much summer heat. But since the sidewalls are 16 ft tall, I added several lexan panels along the upper 8 ft on the South and East sides for some natural lighting. Used a Chamberlin Liftmaster shaft mounted garage door opener since the door weighs about 400 lbs. and it works great. My 2 car garage is right next to the RV garage and open between them so the truck sits next to the fiver. Current fiver is 34 ft, so I have additional length for a longer unit in the future.
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19,007 PostsLatest Activity: Feb 28, 2025