slo’s MONDAY 8/25 poll - Attached vs Detached Garage

Attached vs Detached Garage - Questions in post below ⬇️

  • I have an attached garage - I like it

    Votes: 69 76.7%
  • I have an attached garage - I don’t like it

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Having an attached garage was a must when buying our home

    Votes: 29 32.2%
  • I have a detached garage - I like it

    Votes: 8 8.9%
  • I have a detached garage - I don’t like it

    Votes: 1 1.1%
  • Having an detached garage was a must when buying our home

    Votes: 2 2.2%
  • The garage being attached or detached was not a factor with buying our house

    Votes: 17 18.9%
  • My house currently doesn’t have any type of garage

    Votes: 8 8.9%
  • I currently don’t live in a house - I live in another type of place (apt, condo, etc)

    Votes: 2 2.2%
  • Other - please post your answer

    Votes: 2 2.2%

  • Total voters
    90
I live in a city row house without a garage. Street parking can be a hassle and you need to pay for a residential sticker to avoid being ticketed and towed. We pay to park in a multi story garage two blocks away. It’s open to the public but about 75% of the spaces are for monthly renters. I used to live in a downtown condo high rise and also paid for parking in their garage.
 
Interesting - I don't think I've ever seen a house with an attached garage that didn't have a door to the house. Seems like a strange design choice.
My grandparents built their home like that in the 1950's. In the garage, there was a door out to a covered concrete patio ( very small) and then into the door to the kitchen. The only thing the "patio" was ever used for was firewood storage. Decks and patios were not a thing at all when I was a kid.
Entertaining was on/in a porch yard and park.
 
Interesting - I don't think I've ever seen a house with an attached garage that didn't have a door to the house. Seems like a strange design choice.
My parents house had no door into the house, as I posted above. Custom home built in 1960 by a builder who built a lot of the homes in the area. I don't think any of the houses he built had a door into the house. Different era. It had a back door, something a lot of new homes no longer have. It also had sliding doors from the Family Room and the Living room into the backyard, so three ways to get out of the back of the house, one out the front, but no direct door into the garage.
 
My relatives had an attached garage but there was no interior entry door to the house. You still had to come in the front door.
Interesting - I don't think I've ever seen a house with an attached garage that didn't have a door to the house. Seems like a strange design choice.
It’s very common here in the NY suburbs, and what most homes have. The majority of these houses were built post-WWII, in the late 1940’s and 50’s, into the 60’s. The house I grew up in was like that, a single narrow attached garage with no room for a door. Some people had longer attached garages that extended a bit in the back for a workshop or storage area and those often had a door to walk out to the backyard. Mostly only older homes have detached garages, at the back of the property.

LOL, we didn’t have an electric garage door opener until probably the late 70’s. So you had to pull into the driveway, stop the car, get out of the car and manually open the roll-up garage door (locked with a key), then get back in the car and pull into the garage. Then get out of the car and garage, close the garage door behind you, and enter the house through the front door.
 
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It’s very common here in the NY suburbs, and what most homes have. The majority of these houses were built post-WWII, in the late 1940’s and 50’s, into the 60’s. The house I grew up in was like that, a single narrow attached garage with no room for a door. Some people had longer attached garages that extended a bit in the back for a workshop or storage area and those often had a door to walk out to the backyard. Mostly only older homes have detached garages, at the back of the property.

LOL, we didn’t have an electric garage door opener until probably the late 70’s. So you had to pull into the driveway, stop the car, get out of the car and manually open the roll-up garage door (locked with a key), then get back in the car and pull into the garage. Then get out of the car and garage, close the garage door behind you, and enter the house through the front door.
Also, the dimensions of garages vary. I have what is considered to be a 2 car garage and it is 20 by 20. My parents two car garage was 25 x 25, with a small room stick out further in one corner where the water well, pump and water storage tank were. There is no water district there so every home has it's own domestic water well.
 




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