If you're short on space or looking for some extra income, look no further than the garage.
Although the most prominent part of the postwar single-family home, garages receive little attention. And although a pervasive part of our built environment, they also get no respect.
Meanwhile, if this year's Parade of Homes is any indication, garages keep getting bigger. More than 80 percent of the homes on parade this year had three-car garages and because lots have grown smaller, most of these car hangars now face the street and represent the largest part of a home's facade.
To see what I'm driving at, let's look at the history of these lowly lockers of our stuff. French for "automobile stable," the very word garage tells us a lot about where they came from: They replaced horse stables that once sheltered the main mode of transportation in the 19th century. People did not want to live too close to those sometimes smelly stables, so such structures typically stood at the back of the lot, away from the house and facing an alley, if there was one.
When cars came into widespread use in the second decade of the 20th century, they replaced the horses in the stable with mechanical horsepower. But because of the fear of fire or explosion from gasoline engines, the first garages remained separate from the house, at the back of the backyard.
That didn't last long. By the early 1940s, as families overcame their fear of fossil fuels and began to recover from the Great Depression, garages started to gain their place as part of the home. Garages still remained back from the street and often faced sideways so that only the immediate next-door neighbor could get a peek at their contents: the tools, bikes and lawn gear that tend to accumulate in our car caves.
After World War II, modesty gave way to modernity and garages started to come into their own. The truly liberated households got rid of the garage altogether and went for the carport, a word right out of "The Jetsons" that captures the Space Age obsessions of the postwar period.
But most people didn't want that much exposure, so the garage remained an increasingly large room in most homes. In 1960, the garage took up 45 percent of the space in the average house. A third of the new houses in the Midwest now have three-car garages, compared with 17 percent nationally, making garages the single largest space that most people own.