Take down the garage door and tracking before you.
How to fill in garage door opening.
This lumber will be used to attach your garage door track and a portion of your assembly.
Headers should be a minimum of 12 wide.
Move the doorway to the end of the wall and you have freed up two walls.
Doubled 2 4 s at minimum should be at each edge of the garage door to allow for the mounting of the tracks and jamb brackets.
Plan to add wooden framework to fill the empty space.
Plan to add wooden framework to fill the empty space.
Attach the sole plate with masonry nails or with lag screws inserted into pre drilled holes in the slab.
A confused student is a good student.
Add 2 by 4 inch framing boards on 16 inch centres to fill in the wall area.
This would be a typical application with portal frames each side of the garage door.
Header requirement 2 at minimum the header should be 12 wide with doubled 2 4 at opening and ceiling running the width of the door with a 2 4 in the center of the opening for the center bracket to attach to.
Include window space in the framework if you will install a single window or a larger window section.
Take down the garage door and tracking before you implement the framework plan.
The fact that the door is in the middle means that both sides of the wall around the door have to be kept clear and no furniture can be placed along that wall.
Pull a measurement from the floor of your space to the ceiling next to the door opening.
How to design a fill in for a garage door opening step 1.
Sketch the curbside view of the door space in various ways.
Construct a new sole plate across the opening.
We decided to do a wood frame wall rather than a stone or masonry wall for one main reason.
Use treated lumber rated for ground contact and insert a strip of aluminum or copper termite shield between the wood and the slab.
Draw the house with its present exterior materials.
He started by ripping out the old door door frame and the flimsy insulation leaving a giant hole in the house.
I have shown option 3 but given the 24 stemwall and the 12 projection of the stemwall above the 4 slab it would seem more practical to go with option 2.
It is so surprising how a room can be made much larger simply by moving a door from the middle of a wall to the end.