Workshop in Progress




Extreme How To - DIY Home Improvement

By Matt Weber


Equipment Storage for a Basement Workshop
I shudder to think how many hours of my life I’ve spent searching for lost tools or equipment. When you tackle a lot of home projects, tools and supplies get moved around and often misplaced or hidden by associated clutter. The result of all the searching due to disorganization can be a big, aggravating waste of time.

Having moved to a new home last year, I no longer have a detached garage as my workshop. Frankly, this breaks my heart, but such is life. Now I’m converting a basement garage into my project headquarters and reorganizing all my gear.

The three driving factors for setting up a home workshop are Organization, Storage and Visibility.

Where to Put What

Organizing your tools in a logical manner makes it easy to know where to go to get what you need. Over the years I’ve developed a method for grouping tools by size, shape and application.

Organizing by size is often self-explanatory, because large items such as large table saws, miter saws, pressure washers and air compressors are heavy enough to require floor space. Aside from locating them in the most lightly trafficked area of the workshop, these things are generally stored wherever space is available and often become the obstacles around which to arrange the rest of the shop. The more large items you can store elsewhere—such as an outdoor shed—the more layout options and elbow room you’ll have for everything else.

At the opposite end of the spectrum are very small items, which can be stored in cabinets and drawers. These easily stored items, however, can be difficult to find if they’re stacked and concealed. To make things easy to find, I have a tool cabinet where I keep one drawer dedicated only to drill and driver bits. A second drawer holds blades for jigsaws, recip saws and other cutting tools. All the drawers are organized this way—sorting by both size and utility.

I have too many sockets and wrenches to occupy a single drawer, so I have an entire toolbox dedicated to storing box-end wrenches, socket wrenches of varying sizes, a wide range of sockets and their corresponding extensions and fittings. I’ve found that keeping a toolbox full of these mechanical tools makes the entire kit easy to grab and go, when it’s time for to work on an automobile or assemble furniture.

For the home handyman, the bulk of the small items will over time consist of accumulated fasteners in all shapes and sizes. From nuts and bolts to nails and screws, I have too many boxes and too little space not to stack the containers. This can make finding the right box difficult, so I mitigate this by storing a sampling of the most commonly used fasteners in small labeled containers mounted to a wall.

After sorting the large items and small items, I store everything else either by shape or application. A rake and a shovel serve wholly different uses, but their long-handle designs mean I hang them side-by side, inches away from long-handled pry bars and push-brooms, because I’ve found doing so to be an economical use of storage space.

My first step to converting a basement to a workshop involved coating the walls with Drylok, which locks out moisture to prevent mold and mildew on the cinderblock walls. The white color also reflects light to help illuminate the room.

Many of my power tools come in their own hard cases, which makes them flat and sturdy for easy stacking. In fact, a hot trend among manufacturers is to design stackable tool cases that interlock with similar cases above and below. I store my power tool cases stacked onto tool shelves, and top the cases with the “lumpier” tools that come in canvas bags.

Some tool categories don’t match in shape or size but do in application, so I group them accordingly into bins, which I then stack on shelves. I have a bin full of painting tools—rollers, trays, brushes, tapes, sprayers, scrapers and more. I have another bin full of tile tools that includes grout floats, sponges, trowels, nippers, spacers, cutter, etc. Keep all these bins clearly labeled.

Next, I installed a system of slat-wall panels to keep as much gear off the floor as possible.

You might notice that words like “hang” and “stack” suggest a vertical means of storage, and this is to keep the floor space as unoccupied as possible to leave room to maneuver and allow ample square footage for a work table or benches. You’ll find a zillion plans online to build your own plywood-and-lumber storage shelves, or you can always install simple wall shelves using support brackets fastened to concrete or wall studs.

Wall-Mount Storage Systems

Wall-mount storage systems present another option. Slat-wall type wall storage systems are growing in popularity and for good reason: they’re versatile, clean-looking and store tools and supplies conveniently off the floor for easy-to-see organization. Most of these wall-panel systems are made from PVC and are sold under the names Proslat, FlowWall, and the VersaTrack system from Craftsman—just to name a few. The panels are moisture-resistant and simple to clean, usually available in 4- to 8-foot lengths.

To anchor shelves or storage panels into block walls requires the use of either concrete screws or masonry anchors, plus a hammer-drill and carbide-tipped masonry bit to drill the pilot holes.

Slat-wall panels typically interlock and can be configured to fit your workspace.

Slat-wall panels can be equipped with a wide range of shelf brackets, baskets and more.

The panels install simply by screwing into the wall studs.

Once installed, you can equip the walls with a variety of snap-in accessories, from baskets and shelves to a wide range of hooks. Depending on the accessory, these storage systems are strong enough to store shovels, sledge hammers, string trimmers and more. You’ll even find wall brackets with the holding capacity to store a ladder a few feet off the floor.

Tool hooks simply snap into place and vary in size and shape.

From hammer hooks to shovel collars and more, slat-wall accessories can be spec’ed to match whatever tools you need to store. This selection is part of the new Craftsman VersaTrack system.

Slat-wall accessories can also offer a surprising amount of weight capacity, and some brackets can even support the weight of ladders or outdoor equipment such as weed trimmers.

For smaller tools, arranging tools on a pegboard panel is a tried and true way to keep items in plain view and easy to grab. When a fiberboard pegboard won’t cut it, there’s AlligatorBoard manufactured from 20-gauge steel to be much stronger and more durable than ordinary pegboard. The metal won’t warp, tear, dis-color or rust, and AlligatorBoard features strength-reinforcing dimpled holes, making it easier to install tool hooks than on other pegboards.



Smaller items can be organized on a wall-mounted pegboard. The metal pegboard shown is made by AlligatorBoard, and it is equipped with a broad assortment of hooks and brackets to keep commonly used tools easy to find and grab.

For any type of pegboard, hardware stores sell a huge variety of clips, hooks, holders, and clamps that fit the handles and contours of hand tools ranging from screwdrivers and hammers to wrenches and squares.

I keep a sampling of the most commonly used fasteners in wall-mounted cups labeled for easy access.

A trend amount power tool manufacturers is to make interlocking cases that stack and snap together for easy transport and storage. Shown is the new Craftsman VersaLock System.

Workshop Lighting

Visibility is crucial to an organized workshop, and this requires good lighting. To upgrade the ceiling light in my garage-turned-workshop, I replaced an 8-foot fluorescent tube fixture with Striker Concepts’ new MPI Multi-Point Illumination Motion Ceiling Light. Unlike a traditional single-point light fixture, the MPI creates five points of light from a single standard bulb fixture. These five lights are designed to illuminate all corners of the room and reduce shadows.

Take vertical storage to the next level with ceiling-mounted storage racks that keep large items out of the way. Garage Gator offers Motorized Overhead Bike Lift & Storage Systems that lift up to 220 lbs. of gear up and off your garage floor. The adjustable 6-9′ lift bar system connects hooks, straps and cables to bikes.





To upgrade the workshop lighting, we installed the new MPI Multi-Point Illumination System from Striker Concepts. The central light screws into a standard bulb outlet, and the surrounding four LED pods can extend up to 9 feet in any direction, so you can cast light right where you need it.

The MPI system is simple to install by simply screwing the central hub into bulb fixture, so there is no need to hire an electrician. The surrounding light pods connect to the central hub with push-fit cables and extend up to 9.5 feet, where they can be screwed to the ceiling exactly where you need them. Simply twist the light pods to tighten the cables.

After installing the system, I’m pleased to report the combined light output of the MPI far outshines the 8-foot tube, lighting the peripheral edges of the room much more thoroughly than the old central fixture.

The MPI’s motion sensor keeps the light off until I walk into the room, and a well-lit workshop is crucial to searching for all those tools that tend to go missing.

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