What’s The Best Garden Shed Design For You?
Image by cmkalina via FlickrDo you enjoy working in your garden, but want a place to store those tools and pot those plants? We felt that way as well and had to use our basement until we got our own garden shed.
With a garden shed, you don’t have to go back and forth to the basement or garage. You are also more likely to take better care of your tools. If you follow the below points befors purchasing your garden shed you will end up with a product you are very happy with.
1. Materials
Selecting your garden shed material is significant and can be affected by the area you live in. Medium Garden Sheds can be assembled using different materials like wood, metal and pvc.
Wooden garden sheds have a environmentally friendly feel that blends in well with your garden and surrounds. However they need frequent maintenance like periodically re-staining or sealing the wood. Despite the durability of wood, over time it can rot, split, warp or become susceptible to mold and mildew, and can be vulnerable to termites – so wood garden sheds ought be treated for protection.
Another option is metal garden sheds. These normally arrive in pre-fab sheets and are more long-lasting and cheaper than wood. But they don’t look as natural as wood and can make the yard look a little dull.
Plastic garden shed kits utilizing heavy molded plastics such as PVC and polyethylene are less costly than sheet metal garden sheds. Plastic sheds are not susceptible to termite and wood-boring insect damage, and are just about maintenance-free. They can also come in several colours and styles to accommodate your present architecture. Plastic garden sheds are highly durable and very low maintenance.
2. Function
The most important factor when buying a garden shed is knowing what you are going to use it for. Will you use it for potting seedlings? Or simply as storage? Would you preferably use your garden shed as a workshop or a potting area? If you are considering using it as some form of potting area, you could consider using it as what is known as a potting shed. These are small structures that are the perfect size for potting up hundreds of delicate seedlings.
Consider about what materials or functions you’ll need from your garden shed. Will you need big bins to store compost, potting soil, mulch, and other bulky garden materials? Shelves that hold pots and indoor potting workbenches give you an easy place to re-pot your transplants even when it’s raining outside. A small, outdoor storage garden shed or potting shed can be a big plus.
Ensure you’ve enough space to work in. If you’ve to move out a lawn mower, garden cart, and other tools before you can work at your potting bench or screen your compost, your garden shed won’t be as effective as you had desired. Some gardeners choose a built-in potting bench, whilst others prefer a wheeled bench so they can work outdoors in good weather and indoors when it rains.
3. Design
You typically have three choices when it comes to building the garden shed. You are able to have it delivered pre-assembled, get a pre-fab kit where partial assembly is involved, or build it yourself. It all depends on your budget and your skills.
The easiest, least costly sheds are available in kit form. The assortment of sizes, shapes, styles and designs is virtually endless, ranging from a simple, small structure for keeping your gardening tools dry, to a back yard barn large enough to house a large lawn tractor, all the family’s bicycles, boating gear, and still allow enough room for other tools.
If you’re tight on space the garden hutch is good for small spaces for outdoor storage. If you’re only seeking a place to store tools an outside cupboard, in kit form perhaps all that’s necessary. If you would like to go the entire distance, additional contingents such as barn-style doors, cedar shingles, shutters, windows and window boxes add style and charm.
Many garden sheds are modular to allow for easy extensions, peg-boards, shelving, attic-storage, windows, skylights, and other accessories to be added later.
Make sure any windows and doors you select are lockable. Also check that any doors or windows are placed to accommodate the situation where you want to put the garden shed.
As you can now tell their are many finer details you need to know before you make your garden shed purchase. If you stick to these simple steps, that choice ought to become a good deal simpler, and most importantly you should have a garden sheds which you enjoy for numerous years to come.
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