Hello TAC,
When I bought my house back in the day I was stoked to have a 10X20 garage in which to store my TA. I wasn't thinking of using the space to actually restore the car. Turns out it is possible!
Here's my garage's story including some of the things required in order to make it possible to completely disassemble and reassemble my TA in what I believe is the minimum space required for such a project.
For several years the garage acted as a catch-all storage space, and my TA served as a shelf for all the junk that had no other place to live. I took these pics the day I decided to dig out my old friend to try to get 'em back on the road...
P8090096 by
Tom Sherer, on Flickr
P8090094 by
Tom Sherer, on Flickr
With junk cleared we used bins as shelves and tried working out of my Good-Housekeeping plastic red toolbox...
P8100188 by
Tom Sherer, on Flickr
First lesson: Tools need a proper home and they need to be organized. I got a proper toolbox and my wife suggested organizing the frequently used stuff on peg-board.
055 by
Tom Sherer, on Flickr
In the pic above you can also see shelves that we installed high on the wall so they don't protrude into the space where we were working. Oh...And an undercabinet Radio/CD/TV combo I had lying around.
I learned quickly that some sort of bench/workspace is absolutely necessary. I took some measurements to build something that had enough space to be usable but still allowed us to move around the car. 2' x 4' was about all I could fit. I built a 2' x 4' 'bench' out of wood, then covered it with sheet metal from the hardward store:
P1180099 by
Tom Sherer, on Flickr
It was still a little tight moving around, so I built the bench with hinged legs so I could fold it up against the wall to free up space when necessary:
P1180098 by
Tom Sherer, on Flickr
With the front end sheetmetal off the car we found there was plenty of space to move around...
P4180031 by
Tom Sherer, on Flickr
We soon found storage was an issue. I gained 32 sq. ft. of space for storing parts by taking 4x8 sheet of 1/2" plywood, adding a perimeter of 2x4's to it, and hanging it from the ceiling from chains. You can it at the top right of this pic:
P4070083 by
Tom Sherer, on Flickr
10' is not wide enough to fully open things up to work on the doors or inside. A set of dollies allowed us to push the car all the way over to one side or the other when we needed to work on the doors or interior:
P4210084 by
Tom Sherer, on Flickr
Or, if we just needed more floor space to work on smaller projects:
IMG_1932 by
Tom Sherer, on Flickr
Over the course of the project we added pegboard as new tools and supplies required accumulated:
IMG_2117 by
Tom Sherer, on Flickr
A 10x20 one-car garage is not the ideal space for rebuilding a car. But, with some organization and patience, we found it is possible and we had a great time doing it!
Thanks for checking it out.