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The Great American Dream - Garage Space
Understanding Americans’ love affair with their home, car and garage.
By Donald F. Evans, AIA
April 29, 2000
Professional Builder
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| Don Evans, AIA, is founder and president of The Evans Group, an architectural and planning firm headquartered in Orlando, that has built an award-winning reputation as one of the most diverse firms in the country. |
In one generation, the average family size has decreased 20 percent while our homes have grown by a whopping 50 percent. Homes with 11/2 baths have given way to three baths. Kitchens have grown - although no one wants to cook. And in 1989, 10% of American homes boasted three-car garages. By 1998 that number had grown to 16%, and now over 30% of households have 3-car garages. The benchmark is now being set by the percentage of homes with a four-car plus garage space. And if those numbers arenÆt mind-boggling enough, NAHB researchers predict a sharp rise in these percentages.
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| The flexibility of this plan allows for as many as six cars, or provides a space for a wood shop or even indoor sports court. |
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| Although this Tucson, Arizona builder may not sell a six-car garage with every house, the much-touted option draws the curious to his models.
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1) The first example, a 6600 square-foot home in Orlando, provides an alternative solution with a two-plus-two configuration that can be easily converted to a three-plus-three, offering either a four-car or six-car garage. The plan can also flex to move the guest suite backward and allow a four-car tandem configuration on the house side, providing extra space without cluttering the streetscape with garage doors.
2) This home in Tucson, Arizona appeals to the Midwest buyer suffering from culture shock when unable to find the basement. The builder set his homes apart from the large national builders by offering two-, four, and six-car garages.
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| This Florida garage belies its five-car capability with only one wide, side-entry door. |
3) This preliminary design sketch of a 3190 square-foot, single-family model on the east coast of Florida, includes a five-car, side-entry garage with only one 168 wide door. From the street, one canÆt tell if it is a typical two-car garage or this impressive five-car solution.
4) The builder of this 3500 square-foot model home in Washington, D.C. needed an edge to compete with very large nationwide builders that only build a maximum of a four-car garage. The plan boasts the option of expanding the rear garage to a four-car tandem.
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| Designed for a Virginia-based builder, this 3500 square foot home banks on its garage space to make it competitive. |
Where will this trend end? The auto industry can give us many clues as to what to expect, and with the prevalence of SUVs, some of which are two cars in one, maybe four- and six-car garages arenÆt enough! Only time will tell!
© 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.


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