My rocky relationship with warehouse storage

Hack-Mechanic-Warehouse-Storage-Lead
Rob Siegel

Last year, I wrote about losing the storage spaces that I’d had for nearly a decade. These five small individual one-car bays, each with its own roll-up door, were located in Fitchburg, Massachusetts. I found them when I outgrew my three-car garage in Newton and needed more space, and I was put off by the $300-ish per month I’d need to pay in suburban Boston for restricted-access space. I found that the farther west of Boston I looked, the farther rent dropped off. Fitchburg is about 50 minutes from my house, but it’s a nice drive out Rt. 2, and for $50/month, the garage there was a great trade-off on the cost-distance-access curve. Initially only one bay in the five-car garage was available, but by the end of my tenancy, I was renting all five. The rent for each bay later went up to $75/month, but still, $375/month for five individual bays with 24-hour access was dirt cheap. “The Fitchburg Swap”—taking two hours to drive one cool old car out on a Sunday morning and grab a different one—became a cherished part of my weekend routine.

bmw cars garaged
My dearly departed Fitchburg spaces. Rob Siegel

And then it ended. The house hosting the garages was sold, and it was only a matter of time before the new owners wanted the spaces for their tenants. I scrambled and found space in a cavernous warehouse in Monson, Massachusetts, on the Massachusetts-Connecticut border. On paper, it was—like the Fitchburg space—a slam-dunk; the cost was just $70 per car per month, the warehouse was 70 miles from my house in Newton, and most of that was a straight shot out the Mass Pike (I-90), so with zero traffic, Google Maps estimated the drive at only 15 minutes beyond the Fitchburg spaces. The downside was that it’s not only shared warehouse space but space that’s rented primarily to RVs, trailers, and boats, so when the cars are blocked in for the winter, you’d need a really good reason to have to get one of them out.

warehouse storage aerial
The warehouse in which five of my cars now reside. Ellis Mills Monson

It’s been about 15 months, so I now have enough experience to offer up the following assessment.

Ready?

It’s like a marriage you stay in for the kids.

Don’t get me wrong. Cost-wise, at $350/month for five cars, I’ve yet to find anything that approaches it. It’s expandable—if I buy another car and need somewhere to stash it, I can pony up another $70/month: boom, problem solved. And the guy who owns the warehouse is great. The building does triple duty for his irrigation business, his own cars (he’s into oddball French stuff—that’s redundant, right?) and commercial storage, and he’s been very flexible when I’ve needed to get a car out at times other than normal business hours.

But the sum-total of the 15-month experience is that it’s decidedly less convenient for me than the old spaces in Fitchburg were. If I had a better option, I’d be practicing my “it’s not you, it’s me” lines. But I don’t. So I stay. For “the kids.” Romantic, huh?

The first issue is the distance. Google Maps may say that it’s only 1:05 from my house with no traffic, but I’ve yet to clock it at under 1:15, and with the usual non-rush-hour traffic, it’s more like an hour and a half. At rush hour, it can be over two hours. And on certain peak weekends, like when the kids are coming back to school at UMass Amherst or during prime leaf-peeping in the fall, it can make you cry. And even though I thought the straight shot out the Pike would offset the longer distance, in fact it’s been the opposite—the highway drive is boring. The narrower, curvier, more-punctuated drive out Rt. 2 was much more enjoyable.

The second and much larger issue is the restricted access. Again, I’m glad to have found anything, but it’s been tough to go from the don’t-need-to-call-show-up-anytime-you-want freedom of the old Fitchburg individual garage bay spaces to a locked warehouse that’s surrounded by a locked fence, and inside your car may be blocked in. The blockage may be my own cars, someone else’s, or multiple boats and trailers. I avoid the latter by not even attempting to pull cars out until the owner tells me that most of the big stuff has left. The blocking-in by other cars is usually handled fairly efficiently by the owner’s employees by either putting the offending car in neutral and rolling it, or putting it on GoJak wheel dollies. The whole process is less formal than scheduling an actual appointment to come to the warehouse and pull out a car—whenever I contact the owner and ask him, the answer is usually “sure, someone is almost always here during the week.” That’s usually true and it usually goes quickly enough, unless everyone is in some far-flung corner of the warehouse and difficult to find. And weekends can be tough.

I hate to keep playing the old-guy-with-bad-back card, but that’s the third issue. When I’ve had an urgent need for access on a weekend when no one’s around, the owner has been kind enough to tell me how to get into the building, but the gate is one of those 20-foot-long sliders, and it’s not motorized—you need to manually slide it on its less-than-perfect rollers. Between this, the non-motorized roll-up door, and rolling around my own cars so I don’t foul up the air inside, a swap leaves me with back pain longing for the old individual bay doors of Fitchburg. And, of course, if I go through all that to find that the car I want to drive is blocked in, I’m out of luck.

industrial transfer storage location warehouse exterior
I have a particular lack of fondness for this gate. Rob Siegel

Now, I’ll freely admit that I look at the years the cars spent in Fitchburg through rose-colored glasses. Yes, the 24-hour access and individual bays with roll-up doors were great, but the low price reflected ceilings that leaked until the roof was fixed, and the garages were in a part of town that wasn’t great. (I joked with my wife about the lovely proposition I once received from a lovely redheaded young woman. I thought it was a lot funnier than she did). As much as I tried to do “The Fitchburg Swap” without attracting attention, there’s nothing subtle about vintage BMWs and a ’74 Lotus Europa Twin Cam Special, and when folks walking by ask you about the cars, you can either act like an aloof rich guy (I’m neither) or you can take the time to answer questions and make friends. It all worked out, and nothing ever happened to me or the cars, but I was keenly aware of the less-than-secure situation, and it had been years since I’d stored my BMW 3.0CSi out there.

Still, The Fitchburg Swap could be done in two hours. In contrast, The Monson Swap, best case, is more like four. Again, it doesn’t sound like much, but there’s a significant difference between something that can be knocked off between breakfast and lunch and something that takes half a day.

For all these reasons, I hadn’t been out to the Monson warehouse since Thanksgiving. That’s six months. My previous visit was in September, when I needed to grab my Bavaria and drive it out to upstate New York to be used in a movie. The three other cars in the warehouse—two 2002s and a 635CSi—hadn’t even been started and driven since I moved them there from Fitchburg a year ago.

I was beginning to feel like a negligent hoarder.

Even worse—I, the guy who owns 13 vehicles but keeps insisting he’s “not a collector,” felt like I was having what I could only describe as a crisis of automotive faith. I mean, if I wasn’t driving these cars, why do I even own them? Hell, forget driving—I wasn’t even visiting them.

warehouse storage interior cars under cover
The cars in the Monson warehouse as I’d left them last fall. Rob Siegel

So, last week, out I drove to Monson in “Hampton,” my 49,000-mile ’73 2002. The plan was to check on the cars, drive them, get any inspected that needed it, empty the water from the DampRid containers, and do a “Monson Swap,” driving a different car home. I brought my usual road tool box, a cigarette-lighter tire inflator, starting fluid, fresh DampRid, fresh Bounce dryer sheets to keep the rodents at bay, a portable battery jump pack, and jumper cables just in case the jump pack wasn’t enough. Note that there isn’t access to electricity in the warehouse to run trickle chargers, and my days of pulling batteries out and bringing them home are behind me, so I simply unhook the batteries and hope for the best. I’ve never had problems doing this for a four- or five-month winter sit; I reconnect the negative terminal and the cars usually crank over fine. A year, though, is pushing it, and some of the cars did need the help from the jump pack.

One of the owner’s employees directed me to my cars (they’d been moved within the warehouse to make room for some building repairs). Initially I waived him off, but the warehouse is huge and a bit warren-like, and it would’ve taken me a while to find them if I just wandered around. Plus, even my beloved boxy little BMW 2002s aren’t as recognizable under covers as one might think.

warehouse storage cars under cover
My cars actually were under there. Somewhere. Rob Siegel

The first thing I did was lift the covers off all five cars and take inventory of the inspection stickers. I knew that those on the cars that had been sitting for over a year were expired. I didn’t expect the total to go four out of the five. My new status as negligent hoarder was now officially conferred.

Fortunately, there’s an inspection station less than a quarter mile from the warehouse. Car by car, I checked the fluids, verified that there weren’t mice nesting in the air cleaners, reattached the front license plates, woke the cars from their slumber, looked underneath for puddles, eased the cars out of the warehouse, stopped at the end of the street, checked for leaks and puddles again, then got the cars inspected. I did the Bavaria first, then “Bertha,” the patina-laden 2002.

BMW Patina
Inspection technicians often look at Bertha and make a face that says, “THIS? You want me to inspect THIS?” Rob Siegel

Only “Louie,” the ’72 2002tii, did something surprising. As I was driving it out of the warehouse, I noticed that the brake warning light was on. This is usually due to the handbrake not being fully released. I stopped and jiggled the handbrake lever, even pulled up the rubber boot to manually pull the spring back on the switch, but couldn’t make the light go out. I opened up the hood, thinking that maybe the float in the brake reservoir was erroneously reporting a low fluid level. I was stunned to find that the fluid was not only low, it was below the level of the pipe to the clutch master cylinder.

I walked back and looked at the spot where the car had been parked, but I didn’t see any puddles. Was it possible that I’d driven the car there a year ago with it that low on brake fluid? Or had the fluid leaked out and I couldn’t tell because all my cars had been relocated within the warehouse so the puddles were now somewhere else? I didn’t know. I hadn’t brought any brake fluid, so I drove the car back into the warehouse, grabbed another car, drove to the nearest auto parts store, topped off Louie, tested the brakes and clutch, didn’t see anything obviously leaking, drove the quarter mile to the inspection station, and left the mystery for another day.

green vintage bmw front three quarter
Louie, what brake-fluid-related secrets are you hiding? Rob Siegel

By the end of the day, I’d gotten three of the four cars inspected. I couldn’t do the ’79 Euro 635CSi because I’d left its renewed registration at home. I stashed Hampton in the warehouse and drove home in my ’99 BMW M Coupe (a.k.a. “the clown shoe”).

The next day, I did a second Monson Swap, this time driving out in the Lotus Europa with its newly-improved brakes, and bringing the up-to-date registration for the 635CSi. I got the 635 inspected, and drove it home for some R&R on its air-conditioning system (the last road trip I took it on in 2021, a fitting had loosened up on the compressor and it lost its refrigerant). If, on the drive out the Pike, the tiny feather-light Lotus felt like a 14-year-old girl lost in the big city, the 635CSi was in its Autobahn-inhaling element.

vintage silver bmw shark front three quarter warehouse
You have to admit that that’s a good-looking car. Rob Siegel

So, what began as my feeling like a negligent hoarder, and deepened into a crisis of automotive faith, suddenly was banished like a bad dream in the reassuring light of morning. I was on top of things again. All 13 cars were running and inspected, with eight of them at my house, and the other five just two or three or four episodes of Rick and Morty away. I thought, “Hey, maybe staying together for the kids isn’t so bad. Maybe we just need to spice things up a little bit.”

Maybe even add another kid?

 

***

Rob’s latest book, The Best of the Hack Mechanic™35 years of Hacks, Kluges, and Assorted Automotive Mayhem, is available on Amazon here. His other seven books are available here on Amazon, or you can order personally inscribed copies from Rob’s website, www.robsiegel.com.

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Comments

    In eastern Ontario/ southern Quebec I see people in villages buy the house next door, fill in the basement and put garage doors on the front. Works for them.

    No, warehouse for me ever. Agreed hyper V6 as usual. my inns are currently full of eight cars two boats and a seadoo. in my area nearby covered garage spaces run about 200 to 300 a month! very few available. Life in Carson City, Nevada is well worth it.

    Here in the Province of Ontario, the government scrapped the bi-yearly emissions test several years ago. Maybe because there are not many old cars on the road around here. A few years ago they ended the yearly $120 license plate sticker fee and with 4 cars, that now saves me $480 every year. You just have to remember to go online and update your car info every one or two years. If you don’t and get caught it is a $400 penalty. Insurance in the Toronto area is expensive though.

    You are a hoarder of “fine quality automobiles” so it’s ok. :^)

    First world problems as they say but you have a nice collection.

    Your high taxes pay for some of the best health care in the country huh? You should make use of it to address your hoarding problem. Expending thousands of dollars to store cars to take out for an official gubbermint annual inspection is totally irrational.

    My GF lives in Massachusetts, we’ve a long distance relationship, and was planning to visit her this coming summer, but due to a medical problem of mine, that’s been now postponed. I live in Montana, always ‘carry’ when I’m traveling, and have a concealed carry license too, so when I checked with an MA Officer, he said that driving thru Mass is OK, but staying for more than 3 days with a weapon in my possession, is a real no-no, and I could be arrested… Crazy laws you’ve got back east.

    Getting back to your cars, nice collection btw, here in Montana, there’s no sales tax on anything, and there’s no requirement for annual insp’ns either, plus if your vehicle is more than 11 yrs old, you can apply to the DMV for Permanent Registration for a nominal one time fee, then get a sticker that says PERM for your license plate, then you’ll never have to register your car(s) again for as long as you own them. I have my ’40 Ford truck, ’65 Chevy Van, ’78 Clenet Roadster, my daily driver ’05 Escalade, and my off-road 4×4 all registered that way, and 2 bldg’s to store them in at home, so I feel for you.

    I pay a lot more to store my 1973 2002 in a very nice, dedicated auto storage warehouse near me. Lots of vintage and supercars are stored there. My house’s a garage can only accommodate one car, and there is no room to expand it. I could pay less to store it farther away, but that would mean driving it less and more limited access times. The expense is just part of the cost of living near the middle of major metropolitan area near to work. I think what Rob has arranged for all of his cars is impressive.

    Look at it this way, what else would you being with all the time you spend going back and forth? If this is what you enjoy doing, do it. If you like where you live and can pay for it and are not neglecting to pay off life “essentials” or neglecting other “relationships”, I say knock yourself out. I’m retired have 5 cars, all in my own shop and enjoy them by using them as I travel around playing Senior Softball. Everybody has a life, live it the way you want as long as you do not harm anybody else. I always say, “It is what it is”, but I live by, “Motion is Lotion, Rest is Rust”, not only for our vehicles but our bodies as well. As Rodney King once said, “Can’t we all just get along”…

    I found out that renting a building or spaces was not a good idea. The problem I had was with greedy landlords that kept raising the rent and doing little to maintain the building and blocking my ingress and egress on occasion. I was lucky enough to find a house with a 1050 sq. ft. garage on the property. It has worked out well but now, I am trying to pair down my collection. It is nice to just walk to the rear of my property and my cars are right there. No more rent or landlords for me.

    i’ve always like the 635csi and that one is a good looker, much better than the looker that approached you at the Fitchburg space.

    You know there’s a car hoarding problem when the question is not “Do I NEED a 50 year old BMW?” to “Do I need ALL the 50 year old BMWs?”

    Life sure gets complicated when your cars own you, even if you make your living writing about them. My own collection consists of one project Volvo 1800, and I have driveway space for it, so this is one problem I don’t have. But all its other problems fill my plate… I enjoy reading your posts that remind me “never give up”!

    You do your way of life. You aren’t hurting anyone and if you get enjoyment out of owning 13 cars and occasionally driving them then by all means do it. You will find as you age you won’t be able to, so do it while you can.

    Had several thoughts–first was, build your own garage–even if it’s not at your living location. Next–I accumulated cars (yes vintage cars) for our 4 family members. As the children left home, or were about to leave home, and were buying their own cars–my car numbers began dropping–until the mid-90s, I had but two vehicles which my wife and I needed daily. Then, I bought a collector car for my spare attention and enjoyment–and spent the next 8 years tinkering with it before finally putting it onto the road again. Then, we had a move to a larger house and lot. Again, my car numbers began to increase–UNTIL–yes, until age began to set in and I had less and less physical ability and time to devote to a “fleet”. One has to be agile of mind to know the difference between desire and practicality. Now, I have space but only 2 vehicles. I am happy as a clam! I enjoy seeing my friends with their vintage vehicles. But wait! Not all is lost, I, too, write for a vintage car WebSite and don’t have time to miss my personal collector vehicles! All of those years play an important part in the present efforts.

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