BimmerLife

The Sun Is Setting On Those Fitchburg Garages

Hampton 2002 Fitchburg

The big sweep of my automotive storage situation has been:

I was so happy when this happened. Too bad it didn’t last.

That is the landscape against which I announce that the sun has officially begun to set on my little Fitchburg automotive-storage-space empire.

Last week the new owner contacted me and said that she needs one space back by the end of December. In the text, she also said that the main reason she bought the property was for the garages. I thought that she was joking, but I asked for a meeting so that we could do the human-to-human thing.

She and her husband live not far from me. We had a friendly twenty-minute meeting. They explained that they not only own the house in Fitchburg with the garages, but another house up the street divided into condos. One tenant has asked for a garage, and they would like to offer the other bays to their other tenants, but it doesn’t have to be right now.

I explained that I did have Plan B—the warehouse space I’d found in Monson—but that my main concern was avoiding uncertainty, and not being thrown out with no warning while the snow is flying and the salty roads are carnivorous to rust-prone vintage cars. We agreed that I’ll vacate one garage by the end of the month and the other four by the end of March.

It wasn’t news that I wanted to hear, but sometimes, even with bad news, clarity is preferable to uncertainty. I contacted the guy with the warehouse in Monson, committed to one space immediately, and confirmed that he didn’t think he was going to run out of space by March.

So, with winter weather forecast for the weekend, the “by the end of December” part of the Fitchburg-to-Monson shift began Friday, December 17. I grabbed an auto transport from U-Haul and used the mostly-no-longer-mouse-infested truck to move one car. Yes, I could’ve instead asked Maire Anne to accompany me and then drive me back, but she had other plans. Plus, why do I own this truck, if not to tow cars? Besides, I wanted to dry-run what I may have to go through with the other cars.

But it immediately begged the question which car do I start with? The five cars that were in Fitchburg were Bertha, my repurchased ’75 former track-rat 2002; Hampton, the 49,000-mile survivor 2002 that didn’t meet reserve last spring on Bring a Trailer; the ’99 M coupe; the ’73 Bavaria; and the ’79 Euro 635CSi.

I had already worked through the calculus to bring the cars on which I want to work over the winter here to the house (the 3.0CSi; Louie, the ’72 2002tii,;and the Lotus), but I didn’t expect to have to conduct a second evaluation on which cars would run the clock down for a few more months in Fitchburg (24-hour access but unheated, not bone-dry, and some evidence of rodent activity) versus Monson (heated, dry, not 24-hour access but not “Don’t even think about talking to me until Memorial Day,” either) over the next few months.

I thought about the question of which car should be the first to move to Monson versus which ones to leave in Fitchburg from a number of angles: was there a possibility I might need or want to sell it over the winter, would I bring it back to Newton to work on it first, etc. While I was heading to Fitchburg in the truck, I tossed it around in my head, framing it from this standpoint: Which car is the one you’re the least likely to sell, and the one that you’d like to most protect from snow and salt if, for some reason, you had to get it out of Fitchburg unexpectedly (say the March deadline changed and the truck died, or a U-Haul auto transport was unavailable) and didn’t want to either drive it to Monson or have it sit outside in the driveway in Newton?

My answer surprised the hell out of me: It was Hampton, the survivor 2002 that I’d kept at arm’s length for years—the car that for two years I didn’t really like because it was too original, too nice, and too slow. The car that I viewed as just an investment that was sojourning with me until I cashed out of it, and now thank my lucky stars that it didn’t sell on BaT. That’s quite a turnaround.

So onto the trailer and out to Monson Hampton went.

I felt like I left a hole in Fitchburg.

We rolled up to Hampton’s new home in a 275,000-square-foot multi-use warehouse in Monson.

Huuuuuuuuuuge.

It’s a pretty interesting space. Jim, the owner, is an engineer who owns the building in support of both his business (irrigation) and his car passion. We parked Hampton right next to his Lotus Europa and a row of his Renaults.

Hampton makes new friends in the Monson warehouse.

Jim then gave me a quick tour of the place. It’s huge. There are easily over a hundred cars in it, and that’s not counting the boats, buses, RVs, and trailers. One client alone has more than 70 cars stored there.

I chatted with Jim about the economics of a place this size, and how many folks have advised me to buy a warehouse, store my cars in it, and pay for it by renting the unused space. We both laughed at how people love to give advice about things that don’t involve their own money. “The cost of repairs on this building for things like heat come in $10,000 increments,” he said, “and you don’t really make that back with $70 a month space rental.”

Even out in western Massachusetts, the cost of commercial real estate is still quite high. Jim said that if I was interested in a building, he knew of a large, old decrepit mill with 100,000 square feet on the first floor for two hundred grand, but that he’d be worried about the upper floors caving in. I said that I think I’d confine my acquisition for “fixer-uppers” to cars.

I wrote Jim a $210 check to cover the next three months, and practically wept thanks and gratitude for his being Plan B incarnate. I then headed back to U-Haul with the empty trailer, and then home.

The time-and-money accounting of this dry run were elucidating. It’s normally about 50 minutes from my house to Fitchburg. Google Maps says that it’s about an hour and a half from there to Monson, and about an hour and a quarter from there back home—but everything’s slower when you’re towing, and every loading and unloading step eats up time.

I figured it’d take me most of the day to move one car, and I was right. I left my house at 7:00 a.m. to pick up the trailer at U-Haul, got to Fitchburg by nine, was rolling to Monson at 10:30 (since I had the truck, I also cleaned out a stash of old bumpers I’d stuck in Fitchburg while I was there), and arrived at the big warehouse at around 11:15. I spent over an hour and a half there with Jim. By the time I was back at U-Haul and heading east on the Mass Pike, it was almost 1:30 as I approached Boston, and Friday traffic settled in. After returning the U-Haul trailer, I got back home around 3:30, putting a little under 200 miles on the truck.

Money-wise, the trailer rental cost was about $75 including taxes and insurance. I haven’t topped up the truck’s 34-gallon diesel tank yet, but it burned about half of it; the tank is about a hundred-dollar fill-up, so maybe fifty bucks. Add the tolls and a cup of coffee, and the rough order of magnitude estimate is about $150.

I’m not sure that I want to multiply that by four for the remaining cars. I could probably get two cars swapped per day if I’m efficient, which would save on the trailer rental. Or I could hope for a warm dry spell near the end of winter, requisition four of my local friends, tempt them with post-errand pizza and beer, drive us out to Fitchburg, put the keys in a bowl, and watch them fight over them and do the 1960s Le Mans running start.

I’m sure that the next three months will fly by, and before I know it, the Fitchburg chapter will be closed. Once the cars are all moved to Monson, there won’t be that much of a time difference getting back and forth. In some ways, it’ll be easier, since it’s just a straight shot out the Mass Pike, the entrance to which is about two miles from my house. It will be different, however; it’s not individual garage bays to which I have the keys and at which I can show up at any hour. Instead, I’ll need to coordinate access with Jim. The degree to which I’ll be able to make a snap decision on a Sunday morning, like “I think I’ll drive the M coupe for a few weeks,” go out and get it and be back in two hours, will certainly be lessened.

Part of me feels like I had a window of opportunity to avoid all of this had we moved, but rewinding the tape, I don’t see how I could’ve made the decisions differently. I remind myself that the last thing this is, is hardship. I’m blessed to have these cars and affordable storage for them.

Onward.—Rob Siegel


Rob’s new book, The Best of The Hack Mechanic, is available here on Amazon, as are his seven other books. Signed copies can be ordered directly from Rob here. Plus, five of Rob’s books are on sale for the holidays (cheaper from him than through Amazon).

Comments

Exit mobile version