A bit like you smojo, we have limited storage at home and I now work on the basis of seasoning my logs in the wood. Note that what I describe here works fine for personal usage amounts - it might not scale well if you're looking to sell your firewood.
I prefer to cut to final length and split straight away after felling rather than seasoning large pieces of wood and processing later. That saves further work on them and allows seasoning more rapidly as the maximum amount of grain is exposed. I find splitting green wood is a lot easier than doing so once it's seasoned.
For storage, I've been able to get hold of as many free pallets as I need from which I can put together 'crates' which I fill and then put a tarp over the top. I'm currently processing around five tonnes of beech which came down last winter and that's going into such a crate that's one pallet deep but currently runs to about five pallets in length. I try and get the base pallet reasonably level using scrap wood or masonry blocks and will often use two pallets on the base for strength or ground clearance. I find pallets can be easily fastened together using heavy duty zip ties or timber screws [1] driven in with an 18-volt cordless imapct driver.
When it's time to take logs home for burning I've a number of wheelie bins which fit on my trailer and which can be kept at the side of the house for easy access to the logs. The pallet crates are constructed at track side for easy vehicular access to the logs.
Before settling on the above, I did split some lengths of oak and beech using splitting wedges which were then left to season in the open on some sacrificial bearers to try and keep them off the ground. I know others use that method but I found the pile would get covered in leaves and other detritus which would hold moisture. I only did it once.
[1]
http://www.screwfix.com/p/timberfix-plus-flanged-hex-exterior-timber-screws-6-3-x-100-pk50/80050