As you know from my other thread, I am building a 12 x 16 shed. But, I also wanted a much smaller shed for hand tools. Got this on Amazon for $129 with free shipping. Its 5x3 (ish)
Quality is decent for the price, I don't think I could have built it out of wood for cheaper. Some fastener choices were poor so I improvised with what I had on had (Sheet metal screws etc)
I did accidently bent the thin metal header above the door by accident during assembly so I'll either reach out to them to see if there is any way to get a spare, or just put some little "Tool shed" sign over it so you can't tell
Poured a small concrete slab for it, which was a pain in the butt. The first few bags mixed well, but the final 1 almost seemed like it didn't have enough cement in it. Bleed was crazy even though I mixed it with the correct amount of water. In the end when it was clear it wasn't setting up well, I dumped a bunch of mortar mix I had on hand, which then gave me some cream to work with to actually finish the top. Overall came okay, lucky it will never be seen anyway
Ground was hard as a rock, so I never bothered to dig down. Just threw some spare rebar I had on hand in there. Shed is attached to the slab with concrete anchors
Quality is decent for the price, I don't think I could have built it out of wood for cheaper. Some fastener choices were poor so I improvised with what I had on had (Sheet metal screws etc)
I did accidently bent the thin metal header above the door by accident during assembly so I'll either reach out to them to see if there is any way to get a spare, or just put some little "Tool shed" sign over it so you can't tell
Poured a small concrete slab for it, which was a pain in the butt. The first few bags mixed well, but the final 1 almost seemed like it didn't have enough cement in it. Bleed was crazy even though I mixed it with the correct amount of water. In the end when it was clear it wasn't setting up well, I dumped a bunch of mortar mix I had on hand, which then gave me some cream to work with to actually finish the top. Overall came okay, lucky it will never be seen anyway
Ground was hard as a rock, so I never bothered to dig down. Just threw some spare rebar I had on hand in there. Shed is attached to the slab with concrete anchors