Tag: tiny

  • Luxury Tiny House Leaves Little To Be Desired

    Luxury Tiny House Leaves Little To Be Desired


    The Tiny Luxury House in Davenport, Florida doesn’t fail to deliver on its name. The entire tiny house is completely wifi enabled which means you can control every part of the home via your phone or The Amazon Alexa. I absolutely love the custom wooden tub that can be removed when not needed or wanted. The custom stained glasswork throughout is in my opinion…awesome. I’d like to thank Adam, the owner of New Beginning Tiny Homes for the tiny house video tour!

    For sale here: http://tinyhouselistings.com/listing/davenport-florida-12-tiny-luxury

    Built by A New Beginning Tiny Homes: https://www.facebook.com/anewbeginningtinyhomes

    Subscribe: http://bit.ly/1QoPzmt

    Tiny houses listed for sale and rent daily: http://tinyhouselistings.com

    Tiny houses for sale in your inbox: http://eepurl.com/bAcWb
    Instagram: http://instagram.com/tinyhouselistings
    Facebook: http://facebook.com/tinyhouselistings

  • Could You Live in a Tiny Home?

    Could You Live in a Tiny Home?


    Would you live in a 100 sq ft house? GMM #569!
    Good Mythical MORE: http://youtu.be/pkh2ow5WfNg
    SUBSCRIBE for daily episodes: http://bit.ly/subrl2 ****

    Jay Shafer’s Tumbleweed House – http://bit.ly/1ukNriO
    Macy Miller’s MiniMotives – http://bit.ly/1oIVTrB
    Gary Chang’s Hong Kong Apartment – http://bit.ly/1mhgeBq
    Christian’s Lego Style Apartment – http://bit.ly/1sBA49P

    PREVIOUS episode:
    http://youtu.be/r01P9RmMeBI

    NEXT episode:
    http://youtu.be/_-dvAjFXBq4

    Get the GMM Coffee Mug!
    http://dftba.com/product/1bv/Good-Mythical-Morning-Mug

    Get the GMM Signed Poster plus the GMM T-shirt!
    http://dftba.com/artist/26/Rhett–Link

    Watch the Rhett & Link Channel: http://youtube.com/rhettandlink

    Listen to Ear Biscuits!
    iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/ear-biscuits/id717407884
    SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/earbiscuits

    JOIN the RhettandLinKommunity!
    http://bit.ly/rlkommunity

    LIKE us on FACEBOOK! http://facebook.com/rhettandlink
    FOLLOW us on TWITTER!
    http://twitter.com/rhettandlink
    FOLLOW us on TUMBLR: http://rhettandlink.tumblr.com/
    FOLLOW our INSTAGRAM – http://instagram.com/rhettandlink
    JOIN our circle on GOOGLE PLUS: https://plus.google.com/+rhettandlink

    Good Mythical Morning is available for download on iTunes!
    Video Podcast: http://bit.ly/xuJVPc
    Audio Podcast: http://bit.ly/zSewZ6

    We are two Internetainers dedicated to giving you a daily dose of casual comedy every Monday-Friday on our show “Good Mythical Morning” at youtube.com/rhettandlink2. Thanks for making us a part of your daily routine. Be your mythical best, mythical beast. – Rhett & Link

    Mail us stuff to our P.O. Box
    Go to http://rhettandlink.com/contact for details.

    CREDITS:
    Produced by Stevie Wynne Levine
    Writer, Producer, Camera: Edward Coleman
    Editor, Graphics: Morgan Locke
    Production Assistant: Alexander Punch
    Show Graphics Package and Lighting: Ben Eck
    Intro Motion Graphics: Digital Twigs http://www.digitaltwigs.com
    Intro Music: Pomplamoose http://www.youtube.com/pomplamoosemusic
    Set dresser: Cassie Cobb
    Set construction: Jason Inman
    Wheel music: http://www.royaltyfreemusiclibrary.com/
    Microphone: The Mouse from Blue Microphones: http://www.bluemic.com/mouse/

  • Open Concept Modern Tiny House with Elevator Bed

    Open Concept Modern Tiny House with Elevator Bed


    Amazing Tiny House with open feel, everything transforms! Bed on DIY electric lift! Our favorite tiny house yet!

    Subscribe to my channel! https://www.youtube.com/user/knockoffwood?sub_confirmation=1

    More info and plans/sources: http://www.ana-white.com/2017/01/open-concept-rustic-modern-tiny-house-photo-tour-and-sources

    Full of fresh, original tiny house ideas, this 24 foot long rustic modern tiny dream home on wheels has it all … and open space to boot! Featuring a ceiling bed with automatic lift, convertible lounge area, flip up desk piece, clever sliding closet in the shower, sliding pantry shelf, hidden laundry, and much, much more, this tiny house achieves modern comfort in an open concept floor plan.

  • 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/

  • Jay Austin’s Beautiful, Illegal Tiny House

    Jay Austin’s Beautiful, Illegal Tiny House


    Demand for housing in Washington, DC is going through the roof. Over a thousand people move to the nation’s capital every month, driving up the cost of housing, and turning the city into a construction zone. Tower cranes rising high above the city streets have become so common, they’re just part of the background.

    But as fast as the cranes can rise, demand for housing has shot up even faster, making DC among the most expensive cities in the United States. With average home prices at $453 per square foot, it’s every bit as expensive as New York City. And the struggles of one homebuilder shows just why the city’s shortage looks to continue for a long time.

    “I got driven down the tiny house road because of affordability, simplicity, sustainability, and then mobility,” says Jay Austin, who designed a custom 140-square-foot house in Washington, DC. Despite the miniscule size, his “Matchbox” house is stylish, well-built, and it includes all the necessities (if not the luxuries) of life: a bathroom, a shower, a modest kitchen, office space, and a bedroom loft. There’s even a hot tub outside.

    Clever design elements make the most of minimalism. The Matchbox’s high ceilings, skylight, and wide windows make the small space feel modern, uncluttered, and open.

    At a cost that ranges from $10,000 to $50,000, tiny homes like the Matchbox could help to ease the shortage of affordable housing in the capital city. Heating and cooling costs are negligible. Rainwater catchment systems help to make the homes self-sustaining. They’re an attractive option to the very sort of residents who the city attracts in abundance: single, young professionals without a lot of stuff, who aren’t ready to take on a large mortgage.

    But tiny houses come with one enormous catch: they’re illegal, in violation of several codes in Washington DC’s Zoning Ordinance. Among the many requirements in the 34 chapters and 600 pages of code are mandates defining minimum lot size, room sizes, alleyway widths, and “accessory dwelling units” that prevent tiny houses from being anything more than a part-time residence.

    That’s why Austin and his tiny house-dwelling neighbors at Boneyard Studios don’t actually live in their own homes much of the time. To skirt some of the zoning regulations, they’ve added wheels to their homes, which reclassifies them as trailers – and subjects them to regulation by the Department of Motor Vehicles. But current law still requires them to either move their homes from time to time, or keep permanent residences elsewhere.

    The DC Office of Zoning, the Zoning Commission, the Zoning Administrator, the Board of Zoning Adjustment, and the Office of Planning all declined to comment on the laws that prevent citizens from living in tiny houses. But their website offers a clue:

    Outdated terms like telegraph office and tenement house still reside in our regulations. Concepts like parking standards and antenna regulations are based on 1950s technology, and new concepts like sustainable development had not even been envisioned.

    Complex as it is, the Zoning Ordinance of the District of Columbia was approved in 1958. That’s over five decades of cultural change and building innovations, like tiny houses, that the code wasn’t designed to address.

    Exemptions and alterations to the code are possible – many are granted every year – but they don’t come cheaply. Lisa Sturtevant of the National Housing Conference estimates that typical approvals add up to $50,000 to the cost of a new single-family unit. That’s why large, wealthy developers enjoy greater flexibility to build in the city, but tiny house dwellers… not so much.

    Fortunately, a comprehensive rewrite of the zoning code has been in the works for much of the last decade. Efforts to allow more affordable housing are underway, although many of these solutions favor large developers. Future plans still forbid tiny houses. Austin estimates that, given the current glacial pace of change among the city’s many zoning committees, tiny houses are “many years, if not decades out” from being allowed in the city.

    For now, Jay Austin is allowed to build the home of his dreams – he just can’t live there. The Matchbox has become a part-time residence and a full-time showpiece. The community of tiny houses at Boneyard Studios are periodically displayed to the public in the hopes of changing a zoning authority that hasn’t updated a zoning code in 56 years.

    Runs about 10:30

    Produced, shot, written, narrated, and edited by Todd Krainin.

    Music by Associated Production Music and Lee Rosevere.

    Go to http://reason.com/reasontv/2014/08/07/jay-austins-beautiful-illegal-tiny-house for downloadable versions and subscribe to ReasonTV’s YouTube Channel to receive notifications when new material goes live.”

  • 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

  • Amazing off-grid Tiny Solar House travels across the U.S. | Inhabitat – Green Design, Innovation, Architecture

    Amazing off-grid Tiny Solar House travels across the U.S. | Inhabitat – Green Design, Innovation, Architecture

    The tiny mobile home measures approximately 18 feet long and 9 feet wide and it was constructed with a cedar exterior using vertical tongue-and-groove siding and long walls. It features a living room / office space; a kitchen with a fridge, double sink and a four-burner stove; a bathroom with shower and compost toilet; a sleeping loft with a queen-sized mattress and storage space.

    The solar panels installed on the roof generate enough clean energy to keep the house powered throughout the day. These are connected to maintenance-free deep cycle AGM batteries and a MidNite Solar charge controller and Xantrex inverter that keep the system running throughout the night.

    During its five-month journey across the country, The Tiny Solar House has visited Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Colorado, South Dakota, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. The owner is planning to go on a tour of the East Coast this fall, followed by a tour of the West Coast in the winter and a trip to the Northwest in the spring.

     

    http://inhabitat.com/amazing-off-grid-tiny-solar-house-travels-across-the-u-s/

    On – 14 Oct, 2016 By Lidija Grozdanic

  • 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

  • Couple Building Modern Yurt as Super Portable Tiny Home

    Couple Building Modern Yurt as Super Portable Tiny Home

    Meet Marcin and Anissa, an inspiring couple who are designing beautiful, natural, and minimalist yurts for Yurta in Ontario, Canada.

    image credit: Exploring Alternatives

    They started their career designing lamps and emergency relief tents but transitioned to designing modern yurts when a man from the local Gatineau Park asked them to try their hand at building a lightweight and portable yurt.

    image credit: yurta

    They use natural materials including 100% wool felt, ash and cedar wood, and polyester cotton fabric. Their yurts fit into a 4×8″ trailer making them incredibly easy to move from place to place.

    image credit: Exploring Alternatives

    To enter Yurta is to reconnect viscerally with the different circular dwellings that humans have inhabited across continents and cultures for thousands of years.

    Advertisement

    Yurta is authentic yurt – an original contemporary design for a functional shelter that is strong yet portable. In the spirit of a tent, Yurta features no urban building features. It is designed to connect you with your natural surroundings.

    The Yurta is a superb short or long-term shelter. Its perfect balance of strength and portability makes it ideally suited to a most any climate, site or use. It is an easy and low cost way to add 4-season space to your life:

    http://siamagazin.com/couple-building-modern-yurt-as-super-portable-tiny-home/

    On – 12 Apr, 2017 By Sia Magazine

  • 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

Malcare WordPress Security