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On Wednesday, March 19, 2003 8:40:05 AM UTC-5, Midas Gold wrote:
We've sold our house and are moving temporarily to an apartment in a 2-family house. Although we've whittled down our possessions to the bare minimum (i.e. gotten rid of all the needless junk and clutter that was filling up our house), we still need a bit of extra space and a means to store outdoorsy items. The property's garage and basement are off-limits to us, but our landlord will allow us to get a storage shed - as long it can fit behind his garage and out of the way. We chose the Rubbermaid "Vertical Double Deep" model 3673, because we can assemble it, knock it down, and take it with us when we move again, and because it's the largest shed we can fit between the garage and back fence without running into some small trees back there. Rubbermaid 3673 (sorry for the long URL): http://rubbermaid.com/hpd/consumer/p...irdMenuIndex=5 Close-up: http://rubbermaid.com/common/images/...HP/3673_xl.jpg My question is: What kind of footing can we use under this shed that is non-permanent and easy-to-install? It has its own thick plastic floor, but it needs a level surface. The ground back there is firmly packed and fairly level, but it is interrupted by some protruding small roots and the like. I was thinking of pouring gravel and leveling it out, but I'd like to run it by the experts before proceeding. We intend to assemble the shed with one side abutting the back wall of the garage. Should we lay down a "frame" of lumber to retain the gravel? If so, do we need 4 pieces, or would 3 suffice with the gravel going up to the garage wall on the 4th side? Any other methods that you recommend? Thanks! -- MG Wow - this is an old post - but I'll put this here in case anyone comes across it. For MG - when I installed my shed - I found that using a wooden foundation was actually easy - and I'm not that handy. Being wooden it's not THAT permanent if you don't want it to be, but these plans called for digging down at least 6 inches so that may be a problem with your roots and such. These plans helped me though - hopefully they do you - or someone like you - in the future - http://storage.suncast.com/help-me-c...d-foundations/ |
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