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What’s Behind the Garage Door?


What’s Behind the Garage Door?

garage

Sandy Huffaker/The Wall Street Journal

Garages hold the lawn mower, sports equipment, old paint cans and…a host of bad feelings.

“It got to the point where I didn’t want to go into the garage anymore,” says Mary Thompson Hunt, a radio-show host in Orlando who is working to clear her two-car garage and eventually fit one vehicle inside.

Fed up and out of space, more people are confronting the mess their garages have become—dumping grounds for holiday decorations, bicycles and inherited furniture. Sales of garage-organization products are expected to increase 4.5% this year and each year after through 2019, ultimately reaching $2.4 billion, a 25% rise from 2014, according to market-research firm Freedonia Group, a unit of MarketResearch.com Inc.

The cleanup comes as garages are getting bigger. Last year, 24% of new completed single-family homes had garages for three or more cars, up from 17% in 2000, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Garage frustration is reaching new levels of urgency after years of cheap consumer goods, says Lisa Mark, a professional organizer in Los Altos, Calif. “We’re starting to realize that our very expensive cars are sitting in the driveway while we’re housing our inexpensive stuff—and even junk—in the garage.”

Heather Weisman’s garage has a speckled black, white and gray epoxy floor, and the walls are painted the same gray shade as the walls inside her home.
Heather Weisman’s garage has a speckled black, white and gray epoxy floor, and the walls are painted the same gray shade as the walls inside her home.

Sandy Huffaker/The Wall Street Journal

One in four people said they can’t fit even one car into their garage. A third of respondents said they keep the garage door shut so others won’t see the mess, in a survey last year by Whirlpool Corp.’s Gladiator GarageWorks line of garage-organization products. Some 20% of homeowners said they have argued with their spouse about the state of their garage, the company says. “There’s a lot of friction in the family about the garage,” says Josh Gitlin, Gladiator’s general manager.

At first, Gladiator marketing used images of a dream garage, says Mr. Gitlin. “But the feedback we got from customers was that those shots scared them,” he says. “They just knew they could never pull that off, and didn’t even know how to get started.”

Last year, the brand introduced starter kits that encourage people to start small. The kits each include only a few hooks or hanging units for common items like lawn tools, sports equipment, ladders and boots.

Mark Vantress and his family moved to a new home in Los Gatos, Calif., last year, and nine months later the garage was still full of boxes. “My wife and I would stare and get overwhelmed,” says Mr. Vantress, a professional artist. “I realized we needed professional help.”

Heather Weisman wanted her garage to feel like an extension of her home in San Diego.
Heather Weisman wanted her garage to feel like an extension of her home in San Diego.

Sandy Huffaker/The Wall Street Journal

Working with an organizer, Mr. Vantress says the transformation of the garage into an art studio is nearly complete. One significant garage pile still needs tackling, though: their children’s art work, photos and other memorabilia. “We just decided we’d save that for another day,” he says. “It requires a much deeper level of processing that we aren’t ready for.”

Marital discord over the garage has been lucrative for Magic Garage Cleaners, where women make up about 70% of clients. “The wives say ‘I’m sick of my husband telling me for six months that he’s going to clean the garage,’ ” says David Panes, owner of the Sparta, N.J., organization business. “That’s when they call me. I try to help people purge and at least be able to pull one car inside.”

Solomon Petersen, owner of Miami-based weCleanGarages.com, says roughly half of the couples who use his service work well together. “The other half of the time we are divorce mediators and it’s just bad,” he says. “One person wants to get rid of everything, and the other is a pack rat.”

Barbara Berman, an elementary school principal in Mountain View, Calif., says her garage got out of control after she moved her deceased parents’ belongings to her home six years ago. “So much had emotional attachment for me that I hadn’t been able to get rid of anything,” she says. Last month, she finally got rid of most of it and organized the rest. “It is so freeing,” she says. “I can walk in my garage and get to everything in there.”

Keeping up appearances adds to the stress of a messy garage, organizers say. For neighbors “driving by and waving hello, they are looking into your life to a certain extent,” says Benjamin Weiss, a San Diego-based senior design consultant for California Closets, maker of custom organization systems.

California Closets says sales of its garage products have doubled since 2010, as investing in the garage has become a bigger priority among homeowners. “When clients are moving into a new home, they’re even choosing to do their garage ahead of certain furniture purchases and landscaping, because they’re so starved for storage and organization,” Mr. Weiss says.

Last year, Heather Weisman and her family moved from Buffalo, N.Y., to a house in San Diego that lacked a basement. She spent about $15,000 to have cabinets installed in her attached garage, so the space would feel like an extension of her home’s interior. The garage’s new epoxy floor is speckled black, gray and white, and the walls are painted the same Sherwin-Williams “worldly gray” shade that covers walls inside her home. There are three charcoal-colored cubbies near the door where Dr. Weisman’s children stash their jackets and shoes. Several pictures that didn’t coordinate with the home’s interior now decorate the garage walls.

“When I show people the house, I say ‘You have to see the garage,’ ” says Dr. Weisman, an allergist.

In June, Bekah Shaffer and her husband, Ryan, applied a Rust-Oleum finish on the floor and hung decorative window panes on the wall to add a festive atmosphere for parties. Chalkboard paint on a wall is for writing a dinner menu or “happy birthday.” Lawn supplies and tools are tucked into cabinets, hung up or placed on shelving that can be covered by a sheet, says Ms. Shaffer, a writer in Kokomo, Ind. “We’re careful to keep it neat because we know that people will be hanging out in there.”

Nancy Gray and her 19-year-old son call her garage “the lair,” because it now holds a black-leather couch and matching oversize chair, foot stools, a big-screen television, videogame console and an area rug. “My son now has a room that’s fun for him and his friends,” says Ms. Gray, a psychotherapist in Menlo Park, Calif. “I park in the driveway.”

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