Tag: Simple living

  • Debt/car-free tiny house couple: simple living + resilience

    Debt/car-free tiny house couple: simple living + resilience


    Six years ago, Tammy Strobel was unhappy- “I was commuting 2 hours a day, going to a job I hated, overweight, unhappy, kind of middle class plight”. Then she watched a youtube video featuring Dee Williams and her tiny home- a moment she calls her “turning point”- and she began to dream about less.

    Prior to downsizing Tammy and her husband, Logan Smith, were living in a two-bedroom apartment, driving two cars, commuting long distances and $30,000 in debt, but they were hesitant change the status quo. “Initially, we resisted the idea of moving into a smaller one-bedroom apartment because we were more concerned about appearances and space for guests than for our financial well-being. We decided something needed to change once we realized our debt was causing us so much stress.”

    Tammy and Logan began with small steps. They sold one car and moved into a one bedroom apartment. Next it was a 400 square foot home. Today they are car-free and living in a 128-square-foot home on wheels (designed by Dee Williams’ company PAD). Along the way, the couple shed weight, stress, debt and the unhappiness they felt being tied to jobs they didn’t enjoy. Today, Tammy is a full-time blogger/photographer/teacher.

    Tammy recently published a book titled “You Can Buy Happiness (and It’s Cheap)”, but she explains that it’s not exactly happiness that she pursues, but resilience. “Jobs move, people lose jobs, people die,” she explains, “So how can you structure your life so that you’re more flexible and embrace the good stuff even when loss makes it really really difficult?”

    One of the biggest side effects of living in a small, mortgage-free home on wheels is the freedom to move, something that has served them well in the past year. When Tammy’s father had a stroke, unfettered by home or car loans, Tammy was able to be with him during the last months of his life. When Logan lost his job (it was transferred to Boston), they were able to pick up their home and move from Portland to Northern California to be closer to family.

    For their first move, they attached their tiny, wheeled home to the back of a pickup truck and drove the 400 miles from Portland to Logan’s family cattle ranch in Montague, California (in exchange for free rent they put in “workshare” hours). Within the year, they moved again to be closer to Tammy’s mother: this time they parked in her yard in Red Bluff, CA. Again within the same year, they moved to a more permanent home in Chico (their college town and still close enough to family) where they pay $500 in rent for an empty lot and hookups (it was previously occupied by a mobile home).

    “Even though the past year has been a lot of upheaval with moving the house, like it’s harder than you think to move the tiny house and stressful and all that, but I’m really grateful for that because we’ve had that flexibility to really be there for family”, explains Tammy. Her father’s death “was part of the reason we decided to move back home just to be closer to family and really focus on that because that’s what matters, you only get one shot.”

    Photo credit: Tammy Strobel. She teaches e-courses on how to photograph everyday life: http://rowdykittens.com/everydaymagic/

    “You Can Buy Happiness (And It’s Cheap)” http://www.amazon.com/You-Can-Buy-Happiness-Cheap/dp/1608680835

    Original story: http://faircompanies.com/videos/view/debtcar-free-tiny-house-couple-simple-living-resilience/

  • Tiny House with Incredible Interior Design Built in 40 Days!

    Tiny House with Incredible Interior Design Built in 40 Days!


    Pascal and Catherine built their first tiny house in just 40 days and are currently living in it as their second home. They’re a couple from Kamouraska, Canada, that started a tiny house building company called “Ma Maison Logique,” which in English means “my logical house.” Pascal designed the tiny house to withstand extreme Canadian winters by using triple pane windows and installing a tiny wood stove. They installed an air exchange vent in the bathroom to keep fresh air flowing in and used natural, non-toxic paint and oil finishes to ensure good air quality indoors.

    Catherine is an interior designer, and you’ll see that she added simple touches throughout the tiny house to make it seem more spacious, while at the same time keeping it cozy and comfortable. This is the prettiest tiny house we’ve visited so far, and even though it’s a standard tiny house size, it feels a lot bigger and seems like it would be a great design for a long-term housing situation.

    Learn more about their tiny houses and follow them on Instagram:
    http://www.mamaisonlogique.com
    @mamaisonlogique

    Thanks for watching!

    Mat & Danielle

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    STAY IN TOUCH!
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    Blog: www.exploringalternatives.ca
    Facebook: /exploringalternativesblog
    Instagram: @exploringalternatives

    Music & Song Credits:
    All music in this video was composed, performed, and recorded by Mat Dubé of Exploring Alternatives.

  • Teenager Builds Off Grid Tiny House (80% Recycled Material)

    Teenager Builds Off Grid Tiny House (80% Recycled Material)


    DIY Hand Made Totally Off Grid Tiny Home Complete with Solar and Garden
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    Filmed by Dylan Magaster with the Help of Kelsea Anderson

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  • Living on a 4 Season Houseboat – Beautiful Floating Tiny House!

    Living on a 4 Season Houseboat – Beautiful Floating Tiny House!


    In this video, we meet Bonnie from Wakefield, Québec, Canada who is living on a gorgeous tiny house boat that is full of character and charm. The River Den (or La Tannière) has custom-made asymmetrical windows, a classic ship’s wheel, antique fireplace, and hand-built furniture — all of which give the boat a warm and cozy feel that makes you feel at home as soon as you step on board. The boat is docked on the shore of the Gatineau River and Bonnie lives in it as often as she can when she’s not renting it out on Airbnb (https://www.airbnb.ca/rooms/9678942?guests=1&s=vNzQNzuG).

    The tiny houseboat was designed by Bonnie and her boatbuilding friend, Denis Tremblay, who is known locally as the Wakefield Pirate. Denis and a few of his friends built the boat by hand, including the aluminum frame and the custom windows, the cabinets, and the grill floor in the loft.

    The boat is built on 5 pontoons that are designed to provide flotation while still taking on some water to keep the boat weighed down in the water for stability. The pontoons are also designed to freeze in the ice and are made by a local company called Les Quais Navigables (http://www.quaisnavigables.com).

    It’s a 4-season house boat that is fully insulated and has an antique wood burning fireplace to provide heat in winter. For power, they installed a deep cycle marine battery that provides 12-Volt power for the lights, bilge pump, and navigation lights. They have a Separett composting toilet from Sweden (https://www.separett-usa.com), and a sink that pumps water from the river for washing dishes. For refrigeration, Bonnie uses a cooler with ice, but she might invest in some solar panels so that she can power a proper fridge eventually.

    The main floor has a kitchen, toilet, dining room and living room, and upstairs there is cozy a sleeping loft with a grill floor that allows heat to rise through the floor, and sun & dust to travel down to the main level. One of the windows in the loft opens up onto a gorgeous rooftop patio with a cedar deck and has space for some solar panels if/when Bonnie decides she needs them.

    The boat has a gas motor and can be taken out on the river which is quite impressive considering it’s size! To make sure the boat was still road worthy, they built a wedge roof over the loft that can be taken apart if Bonnie wants to transport it to a different location. The boat is currently docked in the quaint little town of Wakefield, Québec where there are cute cafes, restaurants and shops right across the street.

    If anyone is interested in renting this house boat, check it out on the Airbnb website here:
    https://www.airbnb.ca/rooms/9678942?guests=1&s=vNzQNzuG

    Thanks for watching!

    Mat & Danielle

    ————————————————————-
    STAY IN TOUCH!
    ————————————————————

    Blog: www.exploringalternatives.ca
    Facebook: /exploringalternativesblog
    Instagram: @exploringalternatives

    Music & Song Credits:
    All music in this video was composed, performed, and recorded by Mat Dubé of Exploring Alternatives.

  • Building your own Hawaii minimal house for a vacation’s cost

    Building your own Hawaii minimal house for a vacation’s cost


    Kristie Wolfe spent $5000 to build herself a tiny home on wheels in her hometown of Pocatello, Idaho. It started off as a yearlong experiment in simple living, but she liked it so much she decided to keep living small, not only in Idaho, but she began looking for land to build a tiny vacation home.
    She bought a plot of land in Hawaii sight-unseen for $8000. A year later she bought a plane ticket, packed her bags full of tools and with the help of her mother, began to build a bamboo “treehouse” that to fit the surrounding jungle (though rather than using trees for support, she built it on stilts). After two months of building every day “from dawn to dusk” and an $11,000 investment, she had a second home.
    For Wolfe, the fact that it’s small- 15’ by 15’ or 225 square feet- is an asset. “My original house was 97 square feet so that was really tiny so this feels huge… I think small homes are beautiful because it fits with my lifestyle. I think having a lot of stuff mentally weighs you down even in ways that you don’t realize.”
    Building her own home meant that Kristie was able to design everything custom: from a toilet-sink to save water (she’s not only off-grid, but she relies on rainwater capture for water) to an indoor/outdoor shower with cork-bark tiling. Whether she ever moves here permanently or simply moves on to building yet another home, she now knows she can build her own shelter.

    Filming credit: Ivan Nanney – IvanTheIntrepid.com

    Kristie’s blog: http://tinyhouseontheprairie.net/

    Original story: http://faircompanies.com/videos/view/building-your-own-hawaii-minimal-house-for-a-vacations-cost/

  • Teen tiny house builder Austin Hay finishes dorm on wheels

    Teen tiny house builder Austin Hay finishes dorm on wheels


    We first visited Austin Hay after he had just finished his sophomore year of and had built just the shell of his tiny home on wheels (based on plans donated by Jay Shafer, now of Four Lights Tiny House Company). Now, Austin is in his senior year of high school and he has finally completed his home, including a full kitchen, DIY sofa-bed, nearly full-sized shower and composting toilet (doorknobs and solar to come).

    We stopped in at his open house where his house was packed with a dozen friends (at any one time). His mother weighs in on the future of tiny houses (his high school and other local schools have asked for Austin’s guidance in building their own versions), his girlfriend answered our questions about living in something tiny one day and his grandfather playing Santa Claus to help Austin finish his tiny dorm on wheels.

    More info on original story: http://faircompanies.com/videos/view/teen-tiny-house-builder-austin-hay-finishes-dorm-on-wheels/

    * Austin’s open house was filmed by Johnny Sanphillippo (from our video “Mortgage-free tiny home on a housekeeper’s salary”) and John and Emily Dirksen (my parents who happen to live nearby).

  • We The Tiny House People (Documentary): Small Homes, Tiny Flats & Wee Shelters

    We The Tiny House People (Documentary): Small Homes, Tiny Flats & Wee Shelters


    – Part 1 (Tiny houses): We the tiny house people
    – Part 2 (Tiny houses on the move): Summer of (family) love https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Iti4JU5ObU
    – Part 3 (Urbanism of tiny houses): A spaghetti western of lean urbanism https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l3R4XNandug

    TV producer and Internet-video personality Kirsten Dirksen invites us on her journey into the tiny homes of people searching for simplicity, self-sufficiency, minimalism and happiness by creating shelter in caves, converted garages, trailers, tool sheds, river boats and former pigeon coops.

    — “This extraordinary recalibration of what it means to live the good life”- TreeHugger
    — “For those who find themselves dumbfounded, perplexed and curious regarding how individuals can make everyday-use of very tiny spaces.” – The Blaze
    — “The documentary focuses on the new craze sweeping American — people living in Tiny Houses.” – Weekly World News
    — “The subject is fascinating.” – Directors Live

    [** Rate it yourself on imdb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2148460/?licb=0.22999003025809306 ]

    Kirsten Dirksen is co-founder of faircompanies.com and a Huffington Post blogger. She has worked for MTV, Oxygen, The Travel Channel and Sundance Channel. Her documentaries include “Searching for Da Vinci’s Secret” and “Translating Genocide: Journey to Sudan”. “We the Tiny House People” is her first documentary to premiere on youtube.

    Documentary runtime: 1:21:47
    Release: 2012
    Director/producer/writer/shooter/editor: Kirsten Dirksen
    Concept & additional shooting/writing: Nicolás Boullosa Guerrero

    Features: Jay Shafer (Tumbleweed Tiny House Company), Austin Hay, Jenine Alexander (Forge Ahead Construction), Stephen Marshall (Little House on the Trailer), Suchin Pak (MTV, Hester Street Fair), Graham Hill (TreeHugger, LifeEdited), Felice Cohen, Luke Clark Tyler, Eric Schneider, Michael Chen (Normal Projects), Sarah Dickinson & family, Henri Grevellec, Matthieu de Marien (Fabre/deMarien Architects), Jérémie Buchholtz, Eva Prats (Flores Prats Architects), Christian Schallert, Pascual Alberola, Jorge Cortés (Enproyecto Arquitectura), Johnny Sanphillippo, Heather Wilcoxon

    Locations: California (Sonoma County, San Francisco, Sausalito); New York City; Hawaii; France (Saint-Gilles-Croix-de-Vie, Grezille, Puy-Notre-Dame, Bordeaux); Spain (Barcelona, Ibort, Vall de Laguar).

    * For distributors/film festivals interested in television/theatrical release, please contact me directly at kirstendirksen [at] faircompanies [dot] com.

    Music credits:
    Sivia (Title track) http://sivia.bandcamp.com/
    Dave Warstler (Healdsburg, NYC intro, French cave home, San Francisco) http://www.davewarstler.com/
    My Life is Fireworks (Bordeaux apartment, Barcelona intro) http://www.youtube.com/user/MyLifeIsFireworks
    Kite (Barcelona Christian apartment) http://www.youtube.com/user/pvdbass

    More info on faircompanies:
    http://faircompanies.com/blogs/view/how-i-made-we-tiny-house-people/
    http://faircompanies.com/videos/view/we-tiny-house-people-documentary-trailer/
    http://faircompanies.com/videos/view/we-tiny-house-people-documentary/

  • 7 charming off-grid homes for a rent-free life

    7 charming off-grid homes for a rent-free life

    Want to make rent and utility bills a thing of the past? We’ve rounded up seven off-grid homes that could be the answer to making your dreams a reality. Stylish and self-sufficient, these eco-friendly dwellings promise freedom from the grid. Many are even set atop wheels to let you move with your home to almost anywhere you desire. Keep reading to see seven charming homes that offer homeowners the chance to live off the grid and rent-free.

    off grid rent free housing, off grid housing, buy off grid house, off grid tiny homes, life off the grid in a tiny house, tiny mobile home, zero energy tiny home, Wohnwagon, Ark Shelter off grid, Koda off grid, EcoCapsule home, Moon Dragon tiny home, POD-Idladla house, Walden Studio house, sustainable off grid house,

    Powered by solar energy and made from recycled materials, the WOHNWAGON is a beautiful mobile and modern home with a housing footprint so small it fits within the size of a standard parking lot. This larch-clad caravan was designed for homeowners who wish to travel the world and enjoy comfortable off-grid living thanks to energy-efficient features including a green roof, triple-glazed windows, graywater recycling, solar panels, highly efficient insulation and more. Developed for mass production, the WOHNWAGON starts at 40,000 Euros and can be individually customized.

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    For those who want a little off-grid place of their own with more of a futuristic edge, look no farther than the EcoCapsule. Now available for pre-orders, the tiny egg-shaped home that went viral in 2015 has been displayed around the world wowing visitors with its ability to produce all of its energy onsite with rooftop solar panels and a low-noise wind turbine that feed into a 10kWh battery. Developed by Nice Architects, the mobile home can be moved or dropped in place with a crane or helicopter, giving owners the freedom to live almost anywhere they please.

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    South Africa-based architect Clara da Cruz Almeida collaborated with local design firm Dokter+Misses to create POD-Idladla, an adorable flat-pack home with off-grid capabilities. Targeted at young adults, the tiny solar-powered was conceived as a customizable eco-friendly home at an affordable price. The modular design can also be expanded upon with additional pods to make multi-unit configurations that house up to 12 people.

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    If homes inspired by fantasy and fairytale are more your style, you’ll love Moon Dragon. Tiny house builder Abel Zimmerman Zyl of Zyl Vardos designed and built this tiny timber off-grid home that looks like it’d be right at home in Middle-Earth. Outfitted with a solar kit for off-grid living, the beautifully detailed mobile home boasts masterful craftsmanship as well as impressive an impressive suite of features, from a five-burner Range cooker with two ovens to a loft bedroom large enough for a queen-sized bed.

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    Lovers of travel and modern, minimalist house designs will feel right at home in KODA, a tiny prefabricated home created by Estonian design collective Kodasema. Designed with off-grid capabilities, KODA can be assembled on a variety of surfaces without the need for foundations or disassembled and prepped for relocation in as little as four hours. Fronted with large quadruple-glazed windows, the light-filled modular house can also be expanded with multiple units.

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    Designed as an escape from city life, the Ark Shelter was created to reconnect people with nature. The self-sufficient modular cabin is prefabricated from durable timber and placed on site atop raised, mobile foundations. Wind turbines, solar power, and rainwater collection allow the home to go off-grid.

    off grid rent free housing, off grid housing, buy off grid house, off grid tiny homes, life off the grid in a tiny house, tiny mobile home, zero energy tiny home, Wohnwagon, Ark Shelter off grid, Koda off grid, EcoCapsule home, Moon Dragon tiny home, POD-Idladla house, Walden Studio house, sustainable off grid house,

    Dutch design agency Walden Studio teamed up with carpenter Dimka Wentzel to design a tiny home that’s big on luxury and freedom. Equipped with all the systems needed for off-grid living, the contemporary mobile home is filled with natural light and natural materials like the cork floors and birch plywood paneling. The 17-square-meter home also contains plenty of multifunctional furniture to maximize its small footprint.

    http://inhabitat.com/7-charming-off-grid-homes-for-a-rent-free-life/

    On – 18 Feb, 2017 By Lucy Wang

  • Woman lives in a Tiny House so She Can Travel the World

    Woman lives in a Tiny House so She Can Travel the World


    Jenna built her Tiny Home with her Partner and they Traveled in it for a year from Alaska to Florida. They ended their partnership. Jenna parked the Tiny House in Oregon
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    Source Footage: Tiny House Giant Journey

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  • Kristie Wolfe builds underground home & sets rural WA hamlet

    Kristie Wolfe builds underground home & sets rural WA hamlet


    Inspired by the success of the Hawaii treehouse she built for $11,000, Kristie Wolfe began searching for land to build a “Hobbit”-inspired village. Knowing that there is land to be found for cheap in this country (she bought her Hawaii property for $8000), she began to search the Northwest for sites.
    https://faircompanies.com/videos/building-your-own-hawaii-minimal-house-for-a-vacations-cost/

    “There’s a lot of land everywhere, if you look on craigslist, if you look on zillow, you can find property so it’s not really that there’s not a lot. The issue is with property that’s in my price range- I’m looking for property that’s $10,000 to 20,000- usually there’s a reason why it’s cheap, it’s either an easement problem or you have to drive through a crappy neighborhood… but if you’re wanting to be off-grid, it opens up a whole world of selections, there’s a ton out there.”

    Wolfe paid $18,000 for 5 acres on a hillside above Lake Chelan, Washington. Being a couple miles down a dirt road, there was no option to be on the grid so Wolfe put in a solar panel, septic and a water tank (filled by truck for now) and began to dig the first of her underground homes.

    At 288 square feet, Wolfe’s “tiny house in the shire” was over the maximum square footage allowed for an un-permitted build so she went to the county for approval. With only hand-sketched plans on graph paper, she was able to get a permit.

    The structure went up in a few days “with a lot of help from family and friends” and it was “wrapped and roofed” in a few weeks and then Wolfe finished the interior on her own.

    Inspired by the “Hobbit” books, films and cartoon (from 1977), Wolfe wanted to recreate the cozy feel of a hobbit hole. “Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry, bare, sandy hole with nothing in it to sit down on or to eat: it was a hobbit-hole and that meant comfort.”

    Rather than buying expensive custom details, Wolfe got creative. She used the top of an old cable spool – scavenged for free long before the build- as a round door. To create round windows, she hid secondhand ($10) square windows behind repurposed circular mirror frames. For a very unique cordwood floor, she cut scraps of wood (found beside the road and old firewood) into into one-inch-thick pieces glued down with a heavy construction adhesive and grouted by hand (again thanks much help to friends and family).
    Wolfe has broken ground on the 2nd and 3rd hillside homes. She doesn’t plan to change much of her design except to make the windows larger. The completed “village” will include an above-ground communal kitchen built to look like a thatched-roof English-style pub.

    Filming credit: Ivan Nanney- IvanTheIntrepid.com

    [Kristie’s “Tiny House in the Shire” rents on Airbnb https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/8794484]

    Original story: https://faircompanies.com/videos/kristie-wolfe-builds-underground-home-sets-rural-wa-hamlet/

  • Stored Snow Makes A Great Alternative To Summer Air Conditioning

    Stored Snow Makes A Great Alternative To Summer Air Conditioning

    S’no joke–Japan and Sweden are already saving their winter snow to cool buildings when the weather heats up, and a new study looks at the possibilities of doing the same in Canada.

    In Stockholm, more than 35 million cubic feet of snow is cleared every winter, and dumped. In 2009, Sweden’s Sundsvall Hospital switched to snow for summer cooling. The technology is simple: You store the snow in an insulated pit and then, when needed, you pump the chilled meltwater out into a system of pipes. Just like pumping hot water through a building to heat it, you can use chilled water to cool it.

    The advantages are many. It’s quiet, it’s more reliable, and it doesn’t require refrigeration units to cool the air. Now researchers at the University of British Columbia think Canada could do the same. “Snow is not a waste, but a resource,” study co-author Kasun Hewage told Popular Science.

    The team’s report, published in the Clean Technologies and Environmental Policy journal, explores the different methods of snow cooling, and compares them to regular air conditioning. In Canada, residential buildings account for 17% of total energy usage, and 15% of greenhouse gas emissions, and this is growing thanks to increased use of air conditioning.

    “Snow storage is an ancient, simple, and low-cost technique and it is feasible in countries like Canada, which has high-energy demands for both cooling and heating during a year,” says the report. Its oldest recorded use was in 1833, where buckets of ice were hung in a South Carolina hospital to cool the building. Eventually, machines were invented to do the cooling instead. Why? Storage. Snow storage took up too much precious space, and nobody cared about cutting energy use a century ago.

    Previous studies have focused on regular snow storage versus air conditioning. This one looks at alternative methods of snow storage. Canada is especially good for this because almost everywhere goes below freezing in the winter, so anyone can harvest and store their own snow and ice. There are four traditional methods of storage: Indoors, and outside either on, in, or under the ground. The study added higher-tech options: Regular, loose storage; watertight storage (which minimizes contaminants and the need for later processing); and high-density storage (HSS), where the snow is compacted.

    The results were surprising. Whereas air conditioning units are the worst in terms of environmental impact, conventional storage (just collecting the loose snow and insulating it) was also fairly damaging, partly because it needs a lot of space, and partly because of the materials used to do it. So too was watertight storage. The best overall method, then, is HSS, where the required space and materials are at a minimum over its lifecycle.

    The conclusion is that snow is a good alternative to regular air-con, as long as your climate supports its use. And even if the environmental impacts were equal, snow is just more pleasant, without noise, hot exhaust, or drying of the indoor air. Best of all, you can even fashion a DIY version, if you are willing to dig a pit, and to hang buckets of ice around the place in summer, that is.

    https://www.fastcompany.com/3065312/stored-snow-makes-a-great-alternative-to-summer-air-conditioning

    On – 04 Nov, 2016 By Charlie Sorrel

  • 6 rooms into 1: morphing apartment packs 1100 sq ft into 420

    6 rooms into 1: morphing apartment packs 1100 sq ft into 420


    In 2010, we met Graham Hill- the founder of treehugger.com and a serial entrepreneur. He had just bought two tiny apartments in a century-old tenement building in Soho and he had plans to turn them into laboratories, and showcases, for tiny living. He’d spent most of the past year living in tiny spaces- “a tiny trailer, a tent, and then a boat” and he was convinced others would love it as much if small spaces could be designed right.

    He wanted a tiny space that didn’t sacrifice function, but instead that would expand to provide a wish list including dinner parties for 12, accommodations for 2 overnight guests, a home office and a home theater with digital projector. Not wanting to limit himself to local architects, he crowdsourced the design as a competition and received 300 entries from all over the world. Two Romanian architecture students won with their design “One Size Fits All”.

    Completed in 2012, his LifeEdited apartment doesn’t resemble the cramped space we saw in 2010. Today the 420-square-foot space can be expanded to include the functionality of 1,100 square feet: walls, drawers and beds move and unfold to create 6 rooms: living room, dining room, office, guest office, master bedroom and guest bedroom. If you include the kitchen and the bathroom which morphs into a phone booth or meditation room, the apartment includes 10 total rooms.

    More info on original story: http://faircompanies.com/videos/view/6-rooms-into-1-morphing-apartment-packs-1100-sq-ft-into-420/

    LifeEdited: http://www.lifeedited.com/

  • Building an Off-Grid Tiny House? DIY Network Wants to Film You

    Building an Off-Grid Tiny House? DIY Network Wants to Film You

    Building an Off-Grid Tiny House? DIY Network Wants to Film You.

    The DIY Network is looking for intrepid homebuilders who are in the planning stages of building an off-grid tiny house. The homes can run the gamut from traditional wood frame to straw bale, Earthship, yurt or even shipping container homes. The best thing? They’ll pay you for your time.

    The DIY Network profiles a wide range of builders and homeowners.

    The show, “Building Off the Grid”, finished its first season last year and is looking to cast for the show’s second season. The show has featured log hunting cabins in Alaska, a yurt in Montana, and a (larger) dream home near Yellowstone. The show will pay the homeowners $10,000 upon completion of the project.

    “Building Off the Grid” will feature any type of home including log, mud or even yurts.

    To be considered for the show, you must be ready to build and not already in the process of building. In addition, the home must be built on the land where it will ultimately exist. No off-site homes such as park models will be part of the show. The show will not only document the building of a home, but also off-grid capabilities including solar and wind power, septic, wells and the challenges and benefits of more remote living.

    The entire building process will be documented for the show.

    DIY Network’s other tiny house programming includes “Tiny House, Big Living” and the 2016 Tiny House Jamboree feature which showed a quick shot of Tiny House Blog founder, Kent Griswold. DIYNetwork.com offers videos, home improvement advice, step-by-step instructions, message boards, blogs and more. For more information and to be considered for “Building Off the Grid”, contact Megan Littlefield with Warms Springs Productions.

    The show requires that all homes be built on-site.

    http://tinyhouseblog.com/announcement/building-off-grid-tiny-house-diy-network-wants-film/

    On – 13 Mar, 2017 By Christina Nellemann

  • Self-Sustainable Lifestyles are Becoming Illegal

    Self-Sustainable Lifestyles are Becoming Illegal

    Across the U.S. local zoning officials are making it increasingly difficult for people to go off-grid and live self-sustainable lives. Building tiny homes, harvesting rainwater, using solar or wind energy, and even building community gardens are being targeted and in some cases, the people involved are even threatened with jail time and fines.

    Tiny Homes

    Tiny Homes are structures 500 square feet or less and are one way for people to break free of mortgages, taxes, utility bills, and the general entrapment of having more than is necessary. They’re especially attractive to Millennials and retirees, or those seeking to live off-grid. In Maryland, tiny-house legality will likely be handled at the local level as a zoning or building code issue where placement on a property is determined by local zoning and land use regulations.

    small-house-353929_640A priority for many tiny home owners alongside being self-sustainable, is reducing their carbon footprint and many are opting to use the elements for their energy from solar and wind, collecting rainwater, and reusing gray-water. And in many areas those who put their tiny home on a piece of land away from big cities with the intention or living off grid and self sustainably, are considered outlaws by the state because they are refusing to hook up to the utility grid. Tiny homes everywhere are being targeted by unjust laws to keep people tangled in debt.

    Solar Panels

    The issue of developers and homeowner associations banning homeowners from installing solar panels is widespread across the nation, but is especially relating directly and significantly to Texas, California and Florida, since homeowners in those states are overwhelmingly governed by property owners’ associations. Homeowners have lost lawsuits and have been forced to remove solar units they installed because they conflicted with an HOA’s binding legal obligations written into the deed of a property by the seller. These covenants can penalize buyers by fining those who fail to obey them. In January, Nevada practically killed its solar industry, causing solar providers to leave the state by increasing their tax on solar customers by 40 percent!

    Collecting Rain Water

    Harvested rainwater is storm water that is conveyed from a building roof, stored in a cistern, and disinfected and filtered before being used for toilet flushing. It can also be used for landscape irrigation. In some places it is illegal to even collect rainwater, threatening those who do with jail time and fines, but often you have to jump through a bunch of hoops, such as registering with the division of water rights or some states that put a limit on how much water you are allowed to collect on your property at time.

    Community Gardens

    Community gardens are also labeled a threat of the food industry because of the freedom it provides for low income and impoverished people. One example of a garden being shut down is the South Central Farm that was a community garden located at East 41st and South Alameda Streets and the garden was the largest community garden in the United States. The city allowed the farm the be created but sold the property to Ralph Horowitz in a secret deal out from under the citizens, and the new owner attempted to evict the farmers even though the farmers were able to raise the money to buy the land themselves.The selling of the land was corrupted, as it involved many backroom deals but it still ultimately lead to the demise of the peaceful garden.  There were many protests and acts of civil disobedience for several years before the farm was finally bulldozed in 2006. There have also been many cases from around the country where the city or HOA’s shut down peaceful community gardens and even regular front yard gardens.

    Building On Your Own Land

    Many landowners are also being targeted just for building structures on their own land without having adequate permits. Even people who are building their homes well within codes are being forced to tear down the structures they have spent so much time and money creating. Activist Adam Kokesh, outright bought a piece of land in Arizona, started building and making improvements to it and not soon after he was harassed by David Williams, an employee of the county government. David Williams believed a written document from 1910 obligated Adam to comply with David. After Adam had his lawyer contact David and David was unable to provide any evidence that the code applied to Adam, David only escalated the situation by offering Adam a false choice, either an admin hearing or a criminal prosecution. This is still an ongoing issue for Kokesh as he has elected to not make the regular updates he was making about progress on the land. Which not only affects him as a paid content creator, but also those he was inspiring and helping learn from his venture.

     Though people continue to struggle for the freedom to use their land and structures as they see fit, this self-sustainable movements only continue to grow. More people are choosing to live a more environmentally friendly life and will continue to build a life free from corporate choke-holds. Time will only tell if the state will continue to attempt inhibit the growth or encourage self-sustainable lifestyles but for now their choice is clear.

    https://thehomestead.guru/self-sustainable-lifestyles-illegal/

    On – 06 Apr, 2017 By Hailey

  • How Could Buying a Hobby Farm Change Your Future?

    How Could Buying a Hobby Farm Change Your Future?

    by Bella Scotton
    The Hobby Farm Success in Today’s Modern World

    There are a lot of reasons why a family may decide that a hobby farm would be the best place to live. One of these reasons is because it is perceived as a way of being able to save money. Yet, what often happens is that the hobby farm purchased for the good of the family turns out to be quite a money maker. Generally a farm is classed as a hobby farm if it’s comprised of less than 50 acres.

    What Could 20 Acres Do For You?

    If you were to ask this question of the young Johnson family you may find the answer to be quite surprising. This is a couple that had always found a way to do some hobby farming no matter where they lived, basically following the same concept of saving some money by growing and raising your own food. They soon grew tired of this and decided to turn 20 acres of land into something that was going to produce some money for them. What is impressive about this story is that they raise beef, pork and poultry all on pasture. They have adopted the modern day version of farming which allows them to use these 20 acres without the need for massive barns and tons of equipment.

    80 People Provided With 40 Vegetable Varieties From 9/10 Of An Acre Of Land

    Imagine being able to grow a vast number of veggies to feed 80 people on this amount of land! Bethanee Wright does exactly this at  Winterfell Acres in Blanchardville in south central Wisconsin. She is now ready to branch out to a little bigger operation but has no intentions of going into large scale farming, nor does she need to. With what she has accomplished on this small plot of land imagine what she is going to do with a few acres.

    hobby farm2

    What are the Payoffs?

    While in both these cases none of the parties indicate that they are going to get rich from this type of hobby farming, but they do seem to be making a decent living, while at the same time they are saving money by growing their own food. Then there is also the long term investment in the small amount of property that they do own.

    For the Johnson family their hobby farm is located in Centuria, in the St. Croix River Valley. There still seems to be plenty of open farm land for sale that is the ideal size for a hobby farm. One example, is approx. 28 acres going for $281,900. and this is without a residence being on it as yet. With the history that real estate has it is easy to imagine what the value of property like this will be in as little as five years time. The Johnson’s are renting their land from family members who have an orchard across the street.

    Can 1.5 Acres Really Generate $140,000 a Year?

    This success story originates from Canada, but the concept and principals can easily be applied to any hobby farm in the United States. This is a story about a couple who have been able to net $140,000. a year on their 1.5 acre farm. Their methods have been so successful that they have actually written a book about it. What it all comes down to the right techniques for tilling, permanent beds and crop rotation with the use of a few yet simple tools.

    hobby farm3

    Using the Hobby Farm as a Stepping Stone

    It is not uncommon for many who start out in hobby farming to develop such a passion for it that they want to move onto a bigger farming operation, and many are successful at doing this. A prime example of this is the Godfrey family. They did their homework first when they started with their hobby farming by learning from the Amish. Who without a doubt are first class farmers. The Godfrey’s journey started with a 40 acre hobby farm. Initially their farming activity was more focused on sustaining their needs where they had some horses and a small dairy, and grew their own produce and raised some live stock as well as they had an orchard.

    When they were ready to step up to a larger farming operation they were able to sell their forty acre farm in Cameron Texas for a substantial profit in 2007 with which they used their profits from the sale to purchase a 169 acre farm.

    These are just a few of the many success stories with tons more that stretch right across the US. All of these successes have just focused on the financial aspects of hobby farming and have not even touched on the physical and mental successes that this type of land purchase can bring to every member of the family.
    Like this article?  Please feel free to share or post a link on your site: https://www.landhub.com/blog/buying-hobby-farm-change-future/

    https://www.landhub.com/blog/buying-hobby-farm-change-future/

    On – 19 Jul, 2017 By

  • How Could Buying a Hobby Farm Change Your Future?

    How Could Buying a Hobby Farm Change Your Future?

    by Bella Scotton
    The Hobby Farm Success in Today’s Modern World

    There are a lot of reasons why a family may decide that a hobby farm would be the best place to live. One of these reasons is because it is perceived as a way of being able to save money. Yet, what often happens is that the hobby farm purchased for the good of the family turns out to be quite a money maker. Generally a farm is classed as a hobby farm if it’s comprised of less than 50 acres.

    What Could 20 Acres Do For You?

    If you were to ask this question of the young Johnson family you may find the answer to be quite surprising. This is a couple that had always found a way to do some hobby farming no matter where they lived, basically following the same concept of saving some money by growing and raising your own food. They soon grew tired of this and decided to turn 20 acres of land into something that was going to produce some money for them. What is impressive about this story is that they raise beef, pork and poultry all on pasture. They have adopted the modern day version of farming which allows them to use these 20 acres without the need for massive barns and tons of equipment.

    80 People Provided With 40 Vegetable Varieties From 9/10 Of An Acre Of Land

    Imagine being able to grow a vast number of veggies to feed 80 people on this amount of land! Bethanee Wright does exactly this at  Winterfell Acres in Blanchardville in south central Wisconsin. She is now ready to branch out to a little bigger operation but has no intentions of going into large scale farming, nor does she need to. With what she has accomplished on this small plot of land imagine what she is going to do with a few acres.

    hobby farm2

    What are the Payoffs?

    While in both these cases none of the parties indicate that they are going to get rich from this type of hobby farming, but they do seem to be making a decent living, while at the same time they are saving money by growing their own food. Then there is also the long term investment in the small amount of property that they do own.

    For the Johnson family their hobby farm is located in Centuria, in the St. Croix River Valley. There still seems to be plenty of open farm land for sale that is the ideal size for a hobby farm. One example, is approx. 28 acres going for $281,900. and this is without a residence being on it as yet. With the history that real estate has it is easy to imagine what the value of property like this will be in as little as five years time. The Johnson’s are renting their land from family members who have an orchard across the street.

    Can 1.5 Acres Really Generate $140,000 a Year?

    This success story originates from Canada, but the concept and principals can easily be applied to any hobby farm in the United States. This is a story about a couple who have been able to net $140,000. a year on their 1.5 acre farm. Their methods have been so successful that they have actually written a book about it. What it all comes down to the right techniques for tilling, permanent beds and crop rotation with the use of a few yet simple tools.

    hobby farm3

    Using the Hobby Farm as a Stepping Stone

    It is not uncommon for many who start out in hobby farming to develop such a passion for it that they want to move onto a bigger farming operation, and many are successful at doing this. A prime example of this is the Godfrey family. They did their homework first when they started with their hobby farming by learning from the Amish. Who without a doubt are first class farmers. The Godfrey’s journey started with a 40 acre hobby farm. Initially their farming activity was more focused on sustaining their needs where they had some horses and a small dairy, and grew their own produce and raised some live stock as well as they had an orchard.

    When they were ready to step up to a larger farming operation they were able to sell their forty acre farm in Cameron Texas for a substantial profit in 2007 with which they used their profits from the sale to purchase a 169 acre farm.

    These are just a few of the many success stories with tons more that stretch right across the US. All of these successes have just focused on the financial aspects of hobby farming and have not even touched on the physical and mental successes that this type of land purchase can bring to every member of the family.
    Like this article?  Please feel free to share or post a link on your site: https://www.landhub.com/blog/buying-hobby-farm-change-future/

    https://www.landhub.com/blog/buying-hobby-farm-change-future/

    On – 19 Jul, 2017 By

  • Savvy seniors are buying tiny homes to enjoy their golden years in off-grid style

    Savvy seniors are buying tiny homes to enjoy their golden years in off-grid style

    There’s no rule that says tiny home living has to be just for the young. In fact, seniors are starting a new trend by investing in smaller spaces so they can live out their golden years off-grid and burden-free. Take a look after the jump at some fearless retirees who are making the most out of retirement in custom-made tiny homes.

    Tumbleweeds Tiny Home, Tiny Home senior housing, Tumbleweed Home, tiny home living, tiny home design, tiny home, tiny cabins, retirment cabins, tiny home living for seniors, minimalist living, off grid living, off grid cabins, customized tiny homes,

    According to Tumbleweeds Houses, the latest trend in tiny home living is spawned by older adults who are looking to downsize as they grow older. For example, retiree Bette Presley recently took the tiny home leap at age 72. After deciding to minimize her lifestyle, she moved into a 166-square-foot Tumbleweed Elm cabin and hasn’t looked back since. The compact space has all of the comforts of home, but without the hassle of maintaining a larger area. Additionally, living off-grid was important to Presley and her tiny home is RVIA certified and comes equipped for solar power.

    Related: Genius elevator bed slides vertically on rails to maximize space in Alaskan tiny home

    Tumbleweeds Tiny Home, Tiny Home senior housing, Tumbleweed Home, tiny home living, tiny home design, tiny home, tiny cabins, retirment cabins, tiny home living for seniors, minimalist living, off grid living, off grid cabins, customized tiny homes,

    Tumbleweeds Tiny Home, Tiny Home senior housing, Tumbleweed Home, tiny home living, tiny home design, tiny home, tiny cabins, retirment cabins, tiny home living for seniors, minimalist living, off grid living, off grid cabins, customized tiny homes,

    Converting herself into a minimalist lifestyle was surprisingly easy for Presley, who told the San Luis Obispo Tribune, “We are consumers. We buy too much. We don’t need all our belongings,” she said. “I just experienced the clutter, to live in excess, and I didn’t find it particularly satisfying.”

    Tumbleweeds Tiny Home, Tiny Home senior housing, Tumbleweed Home, tiny home living, tiny home design, tiny home, tiny cabins, retirment cabins, tiny home living for seniors, minimalist living, off grid living, off grid cabins, customized tiny homes,

    Presley is far from alone in finding joy when breaking the confines of excess. A disabled widow, Dani, bought a compact Tumbleweed shell cabin after attending a workshop and has spent a number of years building it into the accessible home of her dreams. She has built a custom wheelchair ramp that leads up to the extra-wide front door and even created a custom-made chair lift using a rock climbing harness that lifts her up to the sleeping loft.

    Tumbleweeds Tiny Home, Tiny Home senior housing, Tumbleweed Home, tiny home living, tiny home design, tiny home, tiny cabins, retirment cabins, tiny home living for seniors, minimalist living, off grid living, off grid cabins, customized tiny homes,

    Nature-loving retiree, Adele, loved the mobile aspect of a tiny home so she invested in a tiny Tumbleweed Cypress on wheels. Not only is the cabin travel-ready, but also has a large outdoor living space, a covered porch and even a hot tub. She was even able to customize the interior with more windows in order to enjoy the beautiful views of the Oregon farm where her tiny home is parked.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7muY0xq5I50

    Tiny homes are also quite convenient for those who are still working in their later years. The famed Sausage Nonnas recently hit the road in three ultra-cute “tiny grandma homes” to deliver their world-famed sausages to lucky families during a campaign called Sausage Sunday.

     

    http://inhabitat.com/savvy-seniors-are-buying-tiny-homes-to-enjoy-their-golden-years-in-off-grid-style/

    On – 18 May, 2017 By Nicole Jewell

  • Building off the grid 3 ways

    Building off the grid 3 ways

    What would your home look like if you unplugged for good? Tour these one-of-a-kind versions of living that dream as seen in three DIY Network specials of Building Off the Grid: Mountain Man Cave, Tiny House on a Lake and Coastal Maine.

    Rugged outdoorsman Joe Donovan decided to build himself a permanent base camp on 10 acres of mountain wilderness. That camp takes the form of a 24-by-28-foot straw-bale cabin, a very old—and, in modern America, very rare—type of dwelling.
    The insulating straw bales beneath thick layers of stucco at this southern Montana cabin are held together by chicken wire hand-sewn with rope. The load-bearing frame itself is made of massive logs.
    Composting toilets aren’t for everyone, but this one more than compensates for its rustic ways with a spectacular view of the Montana wilderness. (Bonus: No need to abandon said view to fetch water for the cistern, or to scamper to an outhouse in the middle of the night.)
    The versatile space behind a Montana cabin’s bathroom features a television and turntable powered by solar panels, as well as a painterly reminder of why its owner chose to build in the wilderness.
    Thick straw walls are designed to help this space stay cool in the summer and warm in the winter—but given how quickly the weather in the northern Rockies can change, concentrated heat from a wood-burning stove is a must.
    Scenery is the star of Joe Donovan’s off-the-grid plan, as he designed his home around the Missouri River view he envisioned having from his front deck. Bonus: It’ll face the warmth of the sun in the wintertime.
    At the northern end of Montana, yurt-dwellers Sean and Mollie Busby take their independent-living plan to the next level by building their dream home overlooking Whitefish Lake. This 12-by-20-foot, two-story home comprises about 480 square feet of interior space.
    This diminutive dwelling at the edge of Glacier National Park affords its owners plenty of room. The spacious deck nearly doubles its footprint.
    The live-edge siding on this tiny house can last for up to 30 years. It shares space with reclaimed wood, which rings in at a fifth of what local stores charge for new lumber.
    The wood from this portion of a tiny home on the shore of Whitefish Lake comes from a timber swap (where the owners exchanged fresh-cut pieces from their property for drier logs that were already seasoned for building).
    While this northern Montana cabin’s owners plan to live off the grid, their nameplate reflects their interest in maintaining close connections to their community.
    This outdoorsy family of six built their 16-by-20-foot off-the-grid retreat on Maine’s remote Pemaquid Peninsula in less two weeks (with a bit of help from their friends).
    This 6-foot-tall black bear welcomes guests to a self-sustaining cabin in Bristol, Maine. In keeping with the homeowners’ lickety-split building plan, their friend carved the sculpture in less than eight hours.
    A gutter-and-downspout system collects rainfall in a catchment for drinking, cooking and bathing—a very good thing, since the nearest alternative source of water is a half-mile away.
    While the kitchen in this remote cabin has no light switches or running water, a granite slab countertop and vintage canister set deliver ample (and appropriately rustic) style.

    http://www.diynetwork.com/shows/building-off-the-grid/building-off-the-grid-3-ways-mountain-tiny-house-coastal-maine-pictures

    On – 22 Feb, 2017 By Lauren Oster

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