Per foot price pressure is forcing innovation on housing everywhere.
This item shows us a little of the evolution taking place and much
more needs to be done.
Every person needs access to a water service, a power service, a
sewage service, a food service all of which can be delivered cheap
enough. After that it is about a sleeping system and a work station
and some extra room in which to swing the cat. Toss out the land
budget and it is all modest. The real creativity comes in designing
effective storage.
Every other need can be part of a shared environment because they
normally call for social access anyway. Some will challenge the need
for internalized food handling and other aspects, but I think the
need for a private space should never be compromised and it happens
to be cheap enough.
This all works best for a couple and two work spaces and singles
usually want that option also.
It has all been worked around for years, but key is to produce a
quality experience or it will simply fail.
Living large in
small houses
By Alyse Nelson
Cross-posted
from Sightline Daily
Nicholas BoullosaA Jay
Shafer tiny home.
My husband and I think
we’ve found a way to pay off our mortgage early, without taking on
an extra job or working nights. We’ve decided to construct a rental
unit — a “mother-in-law suite” — within our home. If it pans
out as we hope, the rental income will let us pay off our loan 10
years early. And who knows: It could give us a chance to live closer
to family as we, or they, get on in years.
Jason and I are not
alone; lots of folks across the country are experimenting with adding
a second (or third) dwelling to an existing single-family home. And
in perhaps the most interesting development, more and more people are
choosing to buck the “bigger is better” trend in North American
housing.
They’re taking small
spaces — backyards, side lots, or freestanding garages — and
using them to build tiny houses.
Ranging from 800
square feet to less than 100 square feet — a far cry from the 1,000
square feet per person that has become the North American norm —
these “doll houses” take many shapes and sizes. And the people
who live in them are as diverse as the homes themselves. Some hope to
save money on housing; others hope to “live green” by choosing a
smaller space; some are trading living space for a neighborhood they
love; and others want to live closer to family or friends.
Here are some of their
stories.
Jay Shafer, a founding
father of the tiny home movement and a co-owner of the Tumbleweed
Tiny House Company, told the BBC: “People are thinking more
about what really is a luxury now. Is it a 30-year mortgage, or is it
just living simply and having the time to do more of what you want?
And I think a lot of people are starting to really change their idea
of the American Dream.”
Dee Williams decided
to rethink her American Dream after building a school in Guatemala
and having a close friend get cancer made her reevaluate her
priorities. “He was getting sicker and sicker, and I didn’t have
the time or the money to really throw myself into helping him. I was
spending a lot of time and money on my house. So the house was the
easiest thing to try to get rid of,” Williams told Yes! magazine.
So she sold her 1,500-square-foot Portland home and built
an 84-square-foot tiny home for $10,000. Now she lives without a
mortgage, giving her the time and money to invest in her friends and
community.
Akua Schatz and
Brendon Purdy’s dream was to live near relatives, but they couldn’t
afford a home in Vancouver, B.C.’s Dunbar neighborhood. Instead of
moving to the suburbs, they decided to build a 500-square-foot
laneway home in Purdy’s parents’ backyard. In a city where
the average home price is $725,086, Schatz and Purdy spent
$280,000 to build their home.
There’s another plus
to their backyard home: Schatz and Purdy have babysitters just feet
away from their front door. “It’s really a North American concept
to have success tied to moving away or distancing yourself, so maybe
we’re reinventing what it means to be successful, and that means
keeping family close,” Schatz suggests in this video from CTV
news.
But unlike Schatz and
Purdy, who plan to eventually switch places with Purdy’s
parents and live in the larger home as their family grows, Jon
and Ryah Dietzen moved from their 1,500-square-foot home to a
400-square-foot cottage with two toddlers. They made the move for its
financial freedom, but the benefits didn’t stop there. “We
realized after a few months how much time, freedom, and peace we were
gaining by not collecting and spending our time taking care of more
‘stuff,’” Jon Dietzen told me. By choosing a smaller house,
they found a better balance between work and home life.
Small homes combat
neighborhood decline brought on by shrinking household sizes. Adding
people can revitalize a neighborhood, allowing schools to stay open,
giving neighborhood businesses more customers, making transit service
cost-effective, and saving on infrastructure costs. Infilling
neighborhoods with backyard cottages helps add more people to a
neighborhood, without altering its character.
As homeowners build
small dwellings, they provide lower-cost housing within the existing
fabric of their neighborhood, with no government support necessary.
Vancouver’s planning director, Brent Toderian, sees this as
the essential value of the trend towards small homes: “[It’s]
about ordinary people. Thousands of individual homeowners can do it,
one by one by one. It’s publicly propelled, not
corporate-propelled, densification. It’s gradual. It’s discreet.
It’s green.”
Now that many cities
have figured out backyard cottage rules, they face a new challenge:
dealing with homes even tinier than the typical accessory dwelling.
Some cities’ regulations set minimum size requirements for
dwellings. Others say a recreational vehicle can’t count as an
accessory dwelling unit, which means “you can camp in your little
house, but not live in it,” writes Dee Williams. Tiny houser
Lina Menard suggests that “people should have the right to a tiny
house as long as it accommodates their needs and desires.” But for
people to exercise that right, cities will have to rethink the zoning
rules that stand in the way of tiny homes.
After a year in a
120-square-foot tiny home, Menard has a good idea of how to live well
in a small space. “I think one of the biggest lessons I’ve
learned is that I’m much happier when I live with just the things I
like best. My relationship to stuff has shifted dramatically over the
past year and a half. I’m much less materialistic than I used to
be. But I really appreciate the little touches, too. It’s not about
deprivation, but about intention,” Menard told me.
She recognizes that
tiny-home living isn’t for everyone, but thinks there’s a way to
broaden its appeal: the “cohousing” model, where tiny
homes would be coupled with shared kitchens, laundry facilities,
guest rooms, and even amenities like barbeques, workshops, and
gardens. “Tiny cohousing would just push the envelope,” Menard
writes in her blog. “People who lived in a tiny house community
would have access to all these things, but they wouldn’t
have to own all these things themselves,” Menard
explains.
Eli Spevak, owner
of Orange Splot, LLC, has developed several innovative housing
projects in Portland. “My goal is to keep modeling new ways of
providing affordable, community-oriented houses,” Spevak told The
Oregonian.
The Sabin Green
cohousing community brings Spevak’s goals to fruition. Sabin Green
includes four homes, built on a 75-by-100-foot lot. The lot had a
single-family home and detached garage. The single-family home
remains, but the detached garage was converted into a 600-square-foot
cottage. A second home and a 600-square-foot accessory dwelling were
built as well. The four homes face onto a central courtyard, but they
also have access to shared gardens, a community room with space for
visitors, and a bike storage shed. The sharing doesn’t stop with
physical improvements: Residents also use just one internet service,
share a newspaper subscription, and meet for weekly dinners.
Eli Spevak Sabin Green before its transformation.
The new view from the street.
The project is home to
a diverse group, including a young couple, retirees, a single woman,
and a small family. Residents Laura Ford and Josh Devine paid just
under $150,000 for their 530-square-foot home. They downsized from a
700-square-foot apartment, but see the loss of square footage as
worth the cost. “If you live by yourself, you might not be able to
afford the brick plaza, the teahouse, the gardens,” Devine told The
Oregonian.
Ruth’s
Garden Cottages — covered by Sightline here — takes
tiny-home communities to another level. On a 50-by-100-foot lot in
Northeast Portland that housed one small dwelling, Orange
Splotadded two tiny cottages, each less than 200 square feet in size.
The miniature structures have room for a sleeping loft, a bathroom,
and a well-proportioned front porch. The cottages make use of the
kitchen in the main home. A shared garden takes up the front 50 feet
of the lot.
The recession and
housing crisis, combined with changing demographics, have led
many of us to reevaluate what we want in a home. More and more folks
are looking for homes within walking distance of jobs, stores, and
transit — and have proven willing to trade square footage for a
vibrant neighborhood. At the same time, millennials increasingly look
for alternatives to the car; baby boomers have reached the age where
they don’t need a big home in the ‘burbs; and more and more
families are choosing to live in multi-generational households.
Tiny houses are a
great solution for all these needs. So whether you are a recent
graduate wanting to be free from high rent, or a family looking
to live without a mortgage, or you want to turn your detached
garage into a mother-in-law suite, a small home might be for you. As
Marcus Barksdale, who built his own small home in Asheville,
N.C., said in this interview: “It would be really neat if more
people sought to have smaller spaces, because it would free them up
for a larger life.”
Alyse Nelson is a city
planner for a small town in Kitsap County, Wash.
I love the tiny home movement. It sparks creativity and imagination.
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