I'm finishing (or re-finishing) my basement and have a question on wood storage. I'll have a wall separating my workroom from rest of basement, and due to lolly columns and footers, the base of the wall will be quite thick - like 24". Then I'm addidng a workbench of 30" deep. And add some other hidden space and I figure I'll have a nice "tunnel" or "tube" in which to store wood, about 70" deep, 24" wide and 50" tall. I plan to partition that tunnel so can store sheet goods on one side and boards horizontally on the other, with several long, narrow "cubbie holes".
Okay, so the question is do I need to ventilate this and how? I was simpyl gonna use 3/4" ply on the floors and 1/2" ply on the sides to finish out the tunnels and for smooth walls, but no wonder whether, since this would effectivelt enclose the tubes on 3 sides and the only open side being the small side, must I ventilate this to allow wood to breathe?
If so, I was thinking the brown pegboard on sides (with its little holes to allow passage of air, but don't think it would be sturdy enough for the bases. Thus, I'm only ventilating the sides and air cannot travel vertically. Would this be okay? and these "tubes" are inside a stud wall, so any ventilation isn't really to the outside anyway.
any ideas?
thanks,
Curt J.
Okay, so the question is do I need to ventilate this and how? I was simpyl gonna use 3/4" ply on the floors and 1/2" ply on the sides to finish out the tunnels and for smooth walls, but no wonder whether, since this would effectivelt enclose the tubes on 3 sides and the only open side being the small side, must I ventilate this to allow wood to breathe?
If so, I was thinking the brown pegboard on sides (with its little holes to allow passage of air, but don't think it would be sturdy enough for the bases. Thus, I'm only ventilating the sides and air cannot travel vertically. Would this be okay? and these "tubes" are inside a stud wall, so any ventilation isn't really to the outside anyway.
any ideas?
thanks,
Curt J.
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