
Custom sheds that clear the garage without taking over the yard.
A shed solves storage best when it gives tools and equipment a real home, fits the lot cleanly, and still lets the backyard look intentional from the house.
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The best shed builds win back garage space without wasting yard space.
For most homeowners, the goal is simple: get tools and equipment out of the garage without dropping an oversized box into the backyard.
Homes that need organized outdoor storage but still want the yard to feel tidy and intentional.
Wood-framed sheds, backyard utility buildings, and custom storage structures sized for the space.
Less garage clutter, better equipment storage, and a yard that still looks put together.
A good shed solves a practical problem first, but it should still look like it was meant to be part of the property.
A Salt Lake City custom shed gave the tools a place to live and opened the garage back up.
This kind of project works when the storage structure is sized to the real equipment load and still respects the yard around it.
Salt Lake City backyard with tight lot space and no room for an oversized prefab box.
Wood-framed backyard shed sized for tools, yard equipment, and easier everyday access.
The structure solved storage and kept the backyard from feeling boxed in.
The finished shed fits the yard and solves storage without looking like an afterthought.
This West Jordan shed adds real storage without taking over the rest of the backyard.
The win here is practical: tools leave the garage, the yard stays readable, and the shed footprint still feels proportional to the house.
West Jordan, Salt Lake City, and similar lots where garage overflow is real but backyard space still matters.
Compact wood-framed shed storage with a clean roofline, full-access doors, and a footprint sized to solve overflow without crowding the yard.
Homeowners usually choose this when they need real storage and still want the property to look tidy from the patio, fence line, and rear windows.
The result is more storage, less garage clutter, and a backyard structure that looks like it belongs there.
Words from our customers
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Common shed questions
Shed estimates go faster when the storage goal, yard footprint, access needs, and desired look are clear before the first conversation.
Why choose a custom shed instead of a prefab shed?
A custom shed can be sized for the yard, storage load, access needs, and look of the property instead of forcing a generic box into the space.
Can a shed be built for tools and yard equipment?
Yes. The structure can be planned around tools, lawn equipment, storage access, door size, and the way the backyard is used.
What should I share before a shed estimate?
Share photos of the yard, rough placement, target size, what needs to be stored, and whether the shed needs to match the home, fence, or nearby structures.
Bring yard photos, rough size, and what needs to move out of the garage.
A custom shed estimate starts with the storage problem: tools, equipment, access, door size, roofline, and how the structure should sit in the yard.
Most shed projects start because the house needs space back.
- Garage is overloaded with tools or equipment
- Need a better place for lawn and yard storage
- Old shed looks worn out or undersized
- Want a shed that fits the home more cleanly
That makes sheds one of the more practical backyard upgrades for daily use.
Sheds pair well with other structure-focused projects.
Depending on the property, framing, stairs, decks, or pergolas may all be part of the bigger exterior plan.