Things You’d See in a 1980s Garage
Music

Things You’d See in a 1980s Garage


Garages in the ’80s were less about parking your car and more about being a catch-all for everything you needed to get out of the house as consumer-driven culture kicked its jazzercised butt into high gear.

Single story family house with driveway

Getty Images/iStockphoto

READ MORE: Things You’d See in a 1970s Kitchen

It was also a place where parents (okay, let’s face it, Dad) could “tinker”—a term that may have fallen out of fashion but simply means “an act of attempting to repair something” (which makes us feel a little less bad for saying it was Dad).

’80s Garages Were Total Chaos

In those pre-Marie Kondo days, organization was a little less about de-cluttering and more about banishing. In reality, ’80s garages were often a Wild West of home storage and if you wanted to lose something, this was the place to put it.

Cluttered Garage

Getty Images

READ MORE: 14 Things That You’d See When Visiting Grandma’s House

Garages were also a suburban sanctuary—closed-off spaces that, when the door slowly rose (or quickly, if you had one of those new fancy automatic openers), revealed an outdoor extension of your home. Neighbors could get an idea of your family’s varied interests, latest purchases, or even darkest secrets.

Let’s click “open” on the remote and enter the world of ’80s garages to see what treasures we might find.

LOOKS: Things you’d likely see in an awesomely ’80s garage

From scandalous bikini calendars to your dad’s AMC Gremlin, ’80s garages were a treasure trove of adventure, good fun, and sometimes downright danger.

Gallery Credit: Stephen Lenz

LOOK: Things You Saw at Grandma’s House

Step into Grandma’s house, where cookie tins hold mysteries and even the toilet roll cover has a story to tell.

Gallery Credit: Stephen Lenz

LOOK: Can You Recognize These Iconic ’70s Objects

Let’s take a walk down a very groovy memory lane and ponder some of the things that made life easy, fun and undeniably cool in the ’70s.

Gallery Credit: Stephen Lenz





Original Source