Creating lumber storage solutions to increase productivity and maintain my sanity!
Right before I left on vacation I built a lumber rack in my workshop. If you follow me on Instagram of YouTube, you’ve probably already seen that finished product as well as some additional messes I have yet to clean up. What you haven’t seen is the mess in my previous lumber storage hallway. I can’t blame it all on the minor FLOOD from a FAILED PLUMBING JOINT — but that certainly didn’t help.
My scrap wood was already starting to take over the world again and I was going to have to address it as soon as I found the time. Then one fine day I walk into my wood storage hallway and see a little pond of water on the floor and water escaping out of the ceiling above. I dealt with the water issue which is a whole other story that I won’t go into except to admit that, at that moment, I couldn’t care less about the shape of the “exploratory hole” I tore into the sheetrock. Also, I may have thrown fistsful of moulding and poplar and everything else I had stored there out of my way so I could set up a ladder, tear into the ceiling, and find the water leak!
This happened a few weeks ago while working in the studio and I just didn’t have time to deal with it beyond getting the leak fixed. After that, I started piling my scrap wood over in a corner of my shop, instead of in the lumber storage hallway. (I think I had a temporary, subliminal dislike for that hallway.)
This is what this side of my workshop looked like 2 days before I left for vacation. I’d just finished the floating shelves in my studio closet and didn’t want to start something new right before I left. I decided it was a good time to spend a few days cleaning up and organizing.
I started by building the hanging lumber storage rack to store all my construction lumber.
Then I went on vacation and came back and decided to keep cleaning for just a few more days!
I built a lumber cart for the corner of the shop, right next to the table saw.
Now I can put all the “cut offs” directly onto the “Scrap Cart” right after I cut them. It makes so much sense! One side of my cart allows vertical storage of long pieces with brackets that secure the material tightly together to help prevent warpage.
Then I cleaned up my hallway. I moved all my poplar and pre-finished drawer material to my new lumber cart and organized my moulding into neat little rows.
This storage area is made up of 2×4’s and MDF. The top rail is a 2×4. The bottom rail is stacked MDF and 2×4’s. The bottom is thicker than the top, creating an angle when it’s mounted on the wall. The angle is to provide support to lumber stored vertically. I drilled holes in both rails to accept 1″ dowels that act as dividers.The hallway also houses this narrow lumber cart that I built ages ago. It holds full and half sheets of lumber and beadboard. I may or may not keep this. Time will tell…
I still need to build one more lumber cart for narrow strips and smaller scraps as well as a clamp storage cart that will go where the ladder currently is. I may have to wait on the clamp storage though……because I’ve decided to give myself this week to clean up my workshop, find lumber storage solutions and get organized. I’ll be happy with whatever I can complete by the end of day on Sunday.
Come Monday I’m back to work in my studio! I just HAD to take a few days and clean up and create a more functional shop so I can be more productive (or at least more sane) while I work.
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