This winter I decided to take a similar philosophical approach to my shop.
Last winter was my first in the shop one my parents land, Its in a steel shed on the back corner of their property. Steel sheds arent really know for their insulative properties, and I picked up a kerosene heater to help make it through but there were some good treks through knee deep snow until I had a path tromped down.
Not that I minded much, it did slow down my progress, glues and finishes dont work in the cold, supplies are difficult to bring to the shop, and when the temperature drops below 0 degrees, even the kerosene heater doesnt help.
We live on the fifth floor of a big apartment building. Our place has a separate dining room in addition to the standard bedrooms, kitchen, living room set up. The dining room is more often referred to as my study because weve put a couple cheep bookshelves along the wall to hold my some of our books. We are not a sit around the table for supper family, the dining room gets used as a catch all place for a lot of other things.
I decided to co-opt the dining room, or rather half of it, to serve as a winter shop. I had built my Joinery Bench to be portable. I just needed a way to transport and store the tools I would need to continue to work. So I started work building a traditional tool chest and managed to get it finished and the shop moved just in time to beat the first snow. (which has since disappeared in the recent rains, but weather in Wisconsin is interesting, If you dont like what it is right now, hold on an hour because itll be different)
I managed to get everything into one minivan load. Well almost everything, I made a return trip to pick up some cherry stock.
It was an interesting catharsis to see the shop cleaned out. If I continue to work out of the tool chest when I move back to the "Summer Shop" and I suspect I will. Im going to have to figure out something different to with the peg board.
The saw till and plane storage shelf look lonely too.