I need some advice from those of you with storage sheds attached to your house. I have a specific question below, but would love to hear other suggestions before I start on this project.
The lawn mower and wheelbarrow are taking up too much precious space in my garage (need more room for power tools!). So I'm going to build a small attached shed adjacent to the garage. I know what size it's going to be, where it's going to go, and even found some plans online, but I have a question about attaching it to the house...
Should I build a back wall to the shed or just use the existing exterior surface of the house as the back wall?
I'm a bit spider phobic and generally like to build things well sealed and minimize nooks and crannys where those critters like to live. So I'd prefer to build a back wall to the shed so its an enclosed structure. However if I do that, then I've enclosed a 10' section of the foundation where termites might be able to tunnel up to the main house undetected.
So I'm torn. I don't know what to do. I need a design that's well sealed from spiders (and mice and snakes...) but still allows a way for the termite inspector to have a clear sightline for possible termite tunnels.
Do any of you have attached sheds? What's your shed back wall like?
Thanks,
J. C.
(My motto: If it's worth building, then it's worth over engineering.)
In case it's important:
The lawn mower and wheelbarrow are taking up too much precious space in my garage (need more room for power tools!). So I'm going to build a small attached shed adjacent to the garage. I know what size it's going to be, where it's going to go, and even found some plans online, but I have a question about attaching it to the house...
Should I build a back wall to the shed or just use the existing exterior surface of the house as the back wall?
I'm a bit spider phobic and generally like to build things well sealed and minimize nooks and crannys where those critters like to live. So I'd prefer to build a back wall to the shed so its an enclosed structure. However if I do that, then I've enclosed a 10' section of the foundation where termites might be able to tunnel up to the main house undetected.
So I'm torn. I don't know what to do. I need a design that's well sealed from spiders (and mice and snakes...) but still allows a way for the termite inspector to have a clear sightline for possible termite tunnels.
Do any of you have attached sheds? What's your shed back wall like?
Thanks,
J. C.
(My motto: If it's worth building, then it's worth over engineering.)
In case it's important:
- The siding is hardiplank
- I'm planning on leaving the siding on the house regardless of whether the shed has its own back wall or not (although I could be convinced to remove the siding if that's recommended)
- My plan is to poor a concrete slab for the shed floor.
- The house is 6 years old and has a (typical) brick foundation about 18" high.