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CitizenZ wrote:Here they are called "shed-boy" houses. Literally sheds that people live in. Some of them are truly works of art built by wooden boat-builders.
Anther one is Pods, Greenpods is a local company.
The usual problem is you are still required to have all the fixings of a real house; legal sized entrance, alternate egress, water heater, sewage system, separate toilet room, insulation, heat, ventilation, rain drainage, foundation, radon ventilation, etc.
The local inspector still needs to check each of the boxes on his normal inspection report for a new home. Same as a 2000 sq ft house.
Same set back and density issues. So you still need a full sized build-able lot, plus all the system development fee's. Here almost $20,000 fee just to connect to the city water and sewage, not including the actual cost of digging and plumbing or the price of land. In the county that money would be needed for a septic and well. Some fee's but not as much as in the city.
PBS story on shed boys.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/stor ... Id=1123036
http://shed-boy.com/
JoergS wrote:Realistically, I think I can launch a nine pound chain saw at 50 fps from a shoulder mounted rubber powered bazooka...
squinty wrote:I reserve the right to yell "Dookyhole!" - or it's Hebrew equivalent if such a thing exists - whilst dispensing a barrage of palm strikes at my opponent.




jamoni wrote:These are built on trailers, so you don't have to meet all the code requirements. They count as RV's, basically.

jamoni wrote:These are built on trailers, so you don't have to meet all the code requirements. They count as RV's, basically.


HKTackDriver wrote:6) It's one step better than a tiny apartment, which is one step better than being homeless.

HKTackDriver wrote:10 reasons it's ridiculous:
1) You cannot entertain normal people.
2) You're forced into the outdoors in order to have any space.
3) Sewage is a major and expensive problem, even with this midget house. You cannot just "dig a hole" and squat over it in most places.
4) Kids? No fucking way in that house.
5) Living the American dream is more like a pipe dream in that house.
6) It's one step better than a tiny apartment, which is one step better than being homeless.
7) You still need water and electric run to it.
8) You cannot "prep" since you have NO storage to do so. That means more frequent trips to the supermarket and more of a reliance on the grid and transportation systems for survival.
9) A fire would gut the house very quickly, it's a trap with the kids up in that attic.
10) If you're not married, you won't be able to bring a significant other back to this "house" without having most average women (and men) run for the hills.
That plan didn't work out so well for a lot of people I know. They are foreclosing, or they are upside down with their house. With the bursting of the housing bubble, I wonder if the concept of building equity in a house is changing.HKTackDriver wrote:For a BOL, maybe. For a house, not on your fucking life. I'd rather be saddled with a mortgage and debt, since both will afford me the opportunity to build equity in a house greater than my savings would have afforded me.
majorhavoc wrote:And as an added bonus, those tiny houses are an excellent means of birth control.


Jeriah wrote:I think we're all pretty much just bullshitting here, which is what the Internet is for. Besides porn.
TacAir wrote:Tiny hous from salvased material - as a pre-built.
In Texas
http://tinyhouselistings.com/creative-t ... y-cottage/
Kinda neat.

squinty wrote:What? Damn I thought this was match.com. No wonder my profile didn't get any hits....

RickOShea wrote:TacAir wrote:Tiny hous from salvased material - as a pre-built.
In Texas
http://tinyhouselistings.com/creative-t ... y-cottage/
Kinda neat.
Those "Cowboy cottages" are a helluva lot more snazzy lookin' than the "Katrina cottages" we had around here:
http://tinyhouselistings.com/katrina-cottages-for-sale/
silentpoet wrote:My first two warning shots are aimed center of mass. If that don't warn them I fire warning shots at their head until they are warned enough that I am no longer in fear for my life.

KnightoftheRoc wrote:For what it is, it's pretty nice, seems well put together. But, for anyone wanting to prep for something long term, the only answer I can see is a storage unit, either on-site, or a rental (which would blow the saving the small house provides) unit- which means your preps are where you aren't. Buying in bulk, another savings method for the fiscally minded, is right out- where would you even put the big package of toilet paper? Never mind canned goods- the shelves don't look that extensive to me. A freezer to compliment the fridge would mean selling the kids, or getting a divorce, just for the floor space.
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