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"Lazy Susan" Storage Shed
"It eliminates the need to carry everything in and out of a door all the time," says Evan Evans, Lebo, Kansas, about the "Lazy Susan" revolving door he built into one end of his home-built tack shed.
With the revolving 36 by 74-in. door closed, the building looks like a regular shed. To gain access to saddles an
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"Lazy Susan" Storage Shed BUILDINGS Miscellaneous 27-4-33 "It eliminates the need to carry everything in and out of a door all the time," says Evan Evans, Lebo, Kansas, about the "Lazy Susan" revolving door he built into one end of his home-built tack shed.
With the revolving 36 by 74-in. door closed, the building looks like a regular shed. To gain access to saddles and other supplies, Evans simply pushes on one side of the door and it flips around.
"It quickly brings everything you need to the outside, ready to place on your horse. A big advantage is that two people can grab their tack at the same time, then push the door to close it and ride off.
"I think the same idea could be used inside a barn with an alleyway, or any other place where you keep your tack or other products. For example, a plumber/electrician told me he might use this same idea on one side of his shop. A revolving door would allow him to put whatever he needed for a job in his service truck without having to carry everything in and out of the shop."
The door simply pivots on a 1 1/2-in. dia. steel pipe.
Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Evan L. Evans, 9466 W. 333rd, Lebo, Kansas 66856 (ph 620 256-6534; email: elevans@osprey. net).
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