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The following article was published in our article directory on December 14, 2013.
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Article Category: Home Management
Author Name: Chris Kauffman
Tool sheds, like garages, basements and attics, can quickly become nightmares, taking on lives of their own and spilling guts out every time the door is opened. Abandoned hockey sticks, skateboards and bikes invariably seem to take up residence in these places, and when the big day comes to clean them out, it can quickly become an unmanageable chore. Following are some easy tips for an organized tool shed.
When organizing anything, you must first decide what belongs in there. If rakes and hoes are lying against a wall in your garage while oil cans and tire pumps are in the tool shed, you're already starting out backwards. Also, decide what the main use of the tool shed is going to be. Is woodworking a hobby? Is gardening? Once that decision has been made, get rid of everything else in the shed.
Now it's time to get things off the floor. The mere sight of things on a floor screams, "Clutter!" Dirt and grime settle on the floor, and if your belongings are located there, they quite naturally become dirty and grimy. Pegboard is a great way to pick up that clutter and give rakes and hoes a permanent home on the wall. Well-labeled plastic bins that are neatly stacked on the floor look a whole lot nicer than half-used bags of potting soil spilling out onto the ground.
Another great storage place in a tool shed is right over your head. Some plywood placed in the rafters make a great storage area for those things you don't use all too frequently but can't bear to part with. Keep in mind part of keeping your tool shed clean is providing proper ventilation, so don't jam plywood over every square foot of overhead space.
Perhaps the most common sense way to organize, but most often overlooked, is the addition of shelving. Depending on your climate, there are a number of ways to go when deciding on appropriate shelving. If you are in a humid environment and moisture is a problem in your tool shed, you may want to use plastic shelving. Metal shelving is great for dry climates, and it doesn't rust. And real do-it-yourselfers can build shelves with plywood and two-by-fours. You may want to go as far as building a workbench to keep saws and other tools not made for a tool box.
Now that your tool shed is organized, how are you going to keep it that way? Start by keeping items most often used near the front, less often in the back (or rafters). Short of shelving, old dressers make great storage areas. Shoe racks, coat hooks and other around-the-house organizers can be put to great use if you used your imagination. By following these simple tips for an organized tool shed, you can move on to the garage. It probably needs help, too.
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