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See How Simple It Is to Build the Original Bigfoot Garage Cabinet.
In this video, you’ll see our team in action as they build a complete cabinet system from start to finish. The real build took about 35 minutes. If you ever need help, we’re ready to guide you through it.
The Ultimate DIY Solution for Effortless Organization.
When shelves stay open and mixed storage spreads, the garage gets harder to reset and easier to overload.


Plus we include a free 1/2 hour consultation on your build day. You can schedule a 15 minute time slot to reach out with questions and make sure your installation goes smoothly.

A garage can start out looking fine with a shelf, a few bins, and plenty of open floor. Then tool bags, extra cleaners, sports gear, and holiday boxes begin landing in the same area. Before long, the wall looks crowded, the floor catches overflow, and small items keep disappearing when you need them most.

Open shelving usually stops working when too many kinds of storage end up sharing one spot. Bigger bins get pushed in front, loose items slide between boxes, and the front edge of the shelf becomes a place for whatever was just set down. That slow buildup is what makes the room feel messy every single day.
What frustrates homeowners most is not always the amount of stuff. It is the way everything stays visible. Bottles, cords, cases, and loose supplies keep staring back at you, so even after a cleanup the garage still looks busy. That visual clutter makes the room feel harder to manage than it should.

A lot of people try fixing the issue by adding one more rack or one more shelf. That usually creates another place for mixed piles instead of better storage. Once project items, backup household goods, and yard tools start blending together, the garage stops feeling useful and starts feeling like permanent overflow.








Choose from three elegant colors of 5/8-inch double-sided melamine, all with perfectly matched edge banding for a seamless finish.

In this picture, you can see every shelf bracket, tool, and piece of hardware you’ll need to assemble an 8' x 6' x 24" section.

Built from 14-gauge powder-coated steel, our boltless racking system forms a heavy-duty, skyscraper-strong foundation for every cabinet.

Our modular cabinets offer flexible add-ons like backs, handles, toe kicks, closet rods, and more.

Each kit includes a custom leveler system to keep your cabinets perfectly level, even if your garage floor isn’t.

Our modular cabinets support add-ons like backs, handles, toe kicks, closet rods, and more for a custom fit.



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Bigfoot cabinets change that wall by replacing exposed shelving with enclosed storage built around a strong steel frame. Instead of watching bins and tools pile up in plain sight, you get cabinet storage made for real garage weight and a cleaner wall that feels much more settled from the beginning.

The melamine finish also matters because it changes what you see the moment the cabinet doors are closed. Labels, bottles, cords, and mixed boxes stop taking over the room visually. That cleaner look makes the garage feel calmer right away, and it becomes easier to keep it looking straight between bigger cleanup days.

The modular layout helps because the storage can fit the way your garage actually works. One section can hold tools, another can take overflow supplies, and another can manage seasonal bins. That kind of separation keeps categories from mixing together and gives everyday items a clear place to go back to.
Closed cabinets are valuable because they stop open shelves from becoming a catchall. Once the doors hide the clutter, the wall looks more finished and the floor stops becoming the backup place for loose items. That one change helps the garage stay more useful for parking, projects, and ordinary household storage.
The system is practical whether you like building things yourself or you would rather have a handyman handle the install. The parts arrive in a buildable sequence, so the project feels manageable instead of custom and complicated. That gives homeowners a realistic path to a finished cabinet wall without unnecessary guesswork.

After the cabinets are in place, the room usually stays steadier because each type of item has a repeatable home. Boxes do not keep drifting to the floor, tools do not get buried behind random bins, and cleanup stops feeling like a fresh puzzle every weekend. The storage starts supporting better habits automatically.
That is why a cabinet system holds up better than a basic shelf wall. It does more than store things. It gives the room a cleaner routine, where new items have a destination and older items stay grouped with similar supplies. That makes the garage easier to use and easier to keep under control.

Book a free consultation! Let us guide you from cluttered to organized!
Book a free consultation by phone, text or video

We also include a free 30-minute build-day consultation. You can schedule a 15-minute time slot to ask questions, review layout details, and make sure everything goes smoothly during installation.
The first step is measuring the wall you want to use and noting every obstacle that could interrupt the cabinet run. Outlets, trim, windows, hose bibs, side doors, and water heaters all matter here, because a clean layout starts with knowing where full sections fit and where spacing needs to change before ordering.
After the wall is mapped out, choose cabinet sections based on what the garage really needs to hold. Think about which items should stay together, which ones get used often, and which piles bother you the most now. That gives the layout a purpose instead of simply filling the wall with storage.






When the system arrives, clear the area, stage the parts near the wall, and review the plan before building starts. That simple preparation makes the install feel much smoother. Instead of sorting through boxes in the middle of the mess, you begin with a cleaner work area and a better sense of order.
This is also when many homeowners decide how hands on they want to be. Some put the whole system together themselves, while others bring in a handyman. Either way, the install goes better when the parts are organized first and the wall is ready, so the build can move without unnecessary backtracking.



Building each section in sequence keeps the cabinet run aligned and helps the whole wall come together in a balanced way. You can check spacing as you go, work around the obstacles already measured, and avoid the patched together look that happens when storage pieces are added one at a time from different places.
A planned build order also makes the finished wall look more intentional. Instead of ending with awkward gaps or one crowded corner, the sections support each other and create a cleaner run across the garage. That is what helps the storage feel like one system instead of several unrelated pieces sharing wall space.


Once the cabinets are built, the payoff shows up quickly. Loose bins come off the floor, mixed shelves get broken into categories, and everyday items stop wandering into corners. The garage feels more open, which makes it easier to sweep, park, work on a project, or grab what you need without digging first.
From then on, cleanup gets simpler because the wall already gives you a routine. Tools go back in one section, backup supplies go in another, and seasonal items stay contained instead of spreading. That is what helps the room stay useful during ordinary life instead of looking good for only one weekend.




Escalon, California

In Escalon, a garage often has to handle project tools, backup household goods, sports gear, and overflow from inside the house without a lot of wasted space. Enclosed cabinets help bring that mix under control, so the wall looks cleaner and the room stays easier to use from one week to the next.
That matters because most homeowners do not want to keep redoing the same cleanup. A finished cabinet wall gives the garage a clearer floor, a calmer look, and a simpler way to put things away. That is what helps the room stay practical instead of slowly sliding back toward visible shelf clutter.