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Clothesline Tiny Homes | Carrie and Shane

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After being married for about a year, Carrie and Shane Caverly gave themselves the ultimate couple’s test. With her background in sustainable design and his in building green homes, the couple worked together to plan and build their own 200-square-foot tiny home on a flatbed trailer. And although it was challenging at times, the collaborative process was truly a bonding experience.

The couple started building in Prescott, AZ in February of 2012 and were able to move into their small house by the middle of May. In Mid-August, their desire to be closer to the Rocky Mountains brought them to a town 10 miles outside of Santa Fe, NM, where they now rent a portion of a larger property.

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But before the big move, Carrie was teaching at a sustainable design school and Shane was building green homes (he still does), and lived in an average house that wasn’t sustainable and green. “So we decided we should start walking the talk,” Caverly says. And ultimately, the financial benefits were what finally pushed them to do it. “We just wanted to change our lifestyle so that we were living within our means,” Caverly says.

At first, she wasn’t a huge fan of the idea, Caverly admits. “We had just gotten married, and I thought it was a crazy idea for two people to live that close,” she says. “I was worried i wouldn’t have enough personal space and we would be way too on top of each other.” But all of her worrying ended up being for naught. Right now, he goes to work every day and she works from home, so they have a healthy amount of time away from each other.

To read more on Carrie and Shane’s story click on this link

 

Not So Tiny Teapot | United Kingdom

If you fancy something a little bit different then this fantastic and undoubtedly unique, multi-functional, two-story space could be just what you have been looking for and could be put to any number of uses.

The Magical Teapot would make a fabulous addition to any visitor attraction – as a feature for a children’s playground; as a quirky fishing hut; as a reception area/tea room/exhibition space etc; as a VIP lounge/viewing platform or press office at any outdoor event or simply the most enchanting “Hobbit Hideaway”.

One thing is for sure, it always makes folk smile, lifts their spirits – they just can’t help themselves!

The two story detached structure is 21 ft in diameter. Sold as seen for collection by purchaser. Supervised dismantling and re-erection service also available by separate negotiation.

The particulars from agents Rettie for the ‘detached house’ known as The Magical Teapot, at Lilliesleaf, Melrose in the Scottish Borders suggest that this two story property would also be ideal for a playground, fishing hut, tea room, VIP lounge or ‘Hobbit Hideaway’. It would, of course, make an ideal garden office too.

 

 

 

Meet Dee Williams | She’s Living Large In a Tiny Home

“The more intentional you are in your choices, the more every change makes room for more changes … I just love that there’s this endless potential.”
—DEE WILLIAMS

In 2003, Dee Williams was a classic slacktivist. She says so herself. Yes, she was passionate about social justice and environmental issues, but she spent most of her free time driving back and forth to Lowe’s and Home Depot for materials to remodel her three-bedroom house in Portland, Oregon. “I would feel like a grand national champion because I’d found a great parking space, or gotten a really great deal on a piece of plywood.”

Then events conspired to deal out a dose of humility.

She went to Guatemala and helped build a school, a friend’s emails from Uganda brought news of malaria and hungry children, and a very dear friend got cancer. It made her remodeling concerns seem trivial.

“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.”

Read more

 

 

Tiny Home Family

Family time: Karl cooks in the kitchen while Archer and Ella play music in the living room

A Florida family who decided to downsize after the financial crash have proved a little space can go a long way – even when raising two young children.

When Hari and Karl Berzins lost their home and restaurant business in 2008 they vowed never to use credit again – even when building their new house.

The couple used their limited savings to buy a plot of land in Virginia in 2011, and have built an adorable 168 sq. ft. home to share with their children Archer and Ella, and a large dog.

Self-sufficient: As well as having no mortgage, the family grow as much of their own food as possible

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2545719/Home-sweet-tiny-home-Meet-family-four-living-168sq-ft-house-economic-downturn-downsize.html#ixzz2rmGSiJy0