How much would you pay for an extreme makeover of your garage? For Michael Cardenas, a restaurateur in Malibu, Calif., the bill hit $30,000. That's a steep price, you might think, to remove some junk and add some fixtures. Yet before the transformation, the place was a disaster zone: crammed with catering equipment, an antique bar and dozens of cases of wine--including bottles Cardenas would have loved to uncork, if only he could find them. "It was definitely ugly," says his wife Madoka.
Now the space exudes Zen calm, reflecting the couple's Japanese heritage and their recently redesigned home. The garage floors are finished in stain-resistant granite, a wall system holds baskets and shelves, there's brushed-aluminum cabinetry--and Cardenas' prized wines are organized in a 2,000-bottle room. "I had so much stuff that I couldn't get in or out," he says. "Now I can navigate the place without killing myself." How many homeowners can make that claim?
Even as the housing market cools, one segment of it appears to be bucking the trend: garage remodeling. The Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University estimates that homeowners spent $2.4 billion on replacing or improving their garages in 2003--more than double the average annual spending over the previous decade. Companies that specialize in this niche, which barely existed a few years ago, say they're expanding exponentially. Garage Envy, the Pasadena, Calif., firm that transformed Cardenas' space, expects 2006 revenues to hit $2.6 million, up from $1.1 million in 2005. GarageTek in Syosset, N.Y., hit $20 million in 2005, a 30% increase over the previous year, says marketing director Barbara Butenski, and this year the company expects its revenues to hit $28 million to $30 million.
Home Depot has caught on too. The retail giant started offering garage-organization and -remodeling services in 2005, and now has the service in 700 of its 1,840 U.S. stores. "The growth of this category has been in the general neighborhood of 10%," says Mike Mullinax, national installation manager in the custom home-organization division of Home Depot. Indeed, says Greg Alford, a senior partner with the Peachtree Consulting Group, a market-research firm based in Atlanta, "garage-organization projects are the fastest-growing segment of the home [renovation] industry." The average cost of a Home Depot makeover is in the $1,000 to $2,000 range, says Mullinax, adding that the chain is "trying popular prices" to target the majority of its customers.
But the fastest growth is coming from high-end jobs in the $10,000 range, according to Alford. Jaime Dietenhofer, a co-owner of Garage Envy, says his garage makeovers average about $8,000. Top-of-the-line garages tend to get fitted with doodads and gizmos, including custom-made shelving, enclosed cabinets, work benches and high-tech wall grids made of materials that can support hefty garage paraphernalia like bikes and lawn mowers. Some business owners are growing profits by manufacturing and distributing those products themselves. Often, however, the only way consumers can get those products is by hiring the companies to do the remodeling project.
