Staying InMotion!
Keep your eyes out for Reiki Wear!!!
Staying InMotion!
Keep your eyes out for Reiki Wear!!!
This year I’m entering my apartment into Apartment Therapy’s Small Cool Contest. I can only have 5 pictures plus a floorplan and it’s so hard to choose what to show. For being such a small place at 350 square feet, it’s proving difficult to show it’s character succinctly. I don’t expect to win but I’m excited to participate.
UPDATE: I made it in! You can review my entry and vote through June 13th. Just go to the Small Cool Contest Site.
New Post has been published on http://www.tinyhouseliving.com/aldo-lavaggi-lives/
Aldo Lavaggi - Unlikely Lives
Aldo has treated life in his tiny home as an experiment – keeping a watchful eye on why it interested him, how he went about building it, and how it has promoted or challenged his habits, thoughts, and general well-being. He was particularly eloquent on that last subject, presenting measured reflections on the complex subject of tiny houses and happiness… continues…” - Unlikely Lives
Read more about Aldo Lavaggi at Unlikely Lives
(Source: The Atlantic, via canigetawitnessblog)
Boise, Idaho-area architect Macy Miller traded her 2,500-square-foot residence for a 196-square-foot tiny home she built herself after dealing with a long and complex foreclosure settlement.
Miller spent around $11,500 on the home, which she constructed on the back of a flatbed trailer.
She completely owns her home, which she shares with her partner and dog, and only pays to rent the land it sits on. The most expensive part was the $2,000 compost toilet that uses little to no water.
(Photos: Macy Miller)
“Living in a house smaller than some people’s walk-in closets may not be for everyone, but those who are able to do so reap many benefits for themselves and for the world around them. Here are some tips for choosing the best type of small house for you and how to simplify your life so living in a small house is enjoyable and not confining…"
(Click the Link to Read the Full Article)
The Dumpster Project: Creating One of the Most Sustainable Tiny Homes
Jeff Wilson, an environmental professor at Huston-Tillotson University in Austin, Texas, has been living in a dumpster on campus for the past four months. The 33-sq-ft space, only 1% the size of the average American home, is in the first phase of a project to test the possibilities of sustainable and “tiny” living. Currently outfitted to match the poor energy performance of a typical American house, it will soon be retrofitted with all sustainable features, including solar panels and a “cutting-edge eco toilet.” The project is currently seeking additional funding through Kickstarter.
(Source: fastcoexist.com, via architecture-effects)
This ultra versatile tiny house makes use of every inch of its 210 square feet, and is equipped with solar panels and a water purification system so that it can go completely off the grid whenever necessary.
How to downsize your stuff for a tiny house!
We had vistors to the tiny hall house a few weeks ago, and as we were sharing our experience about building our tiny house and downsizing our stuff, I realized that one of biggest questions after: “How can 3 people and a dog live in such a small space?” Was: “What did you do with all your stuff?!”
And so I decided on this lovely New England morning, I would talk about what we did, and more importantly how getting your possessions down to what you might think will be the final items in your tiny house ahead of time, was a HUGE help in our building experience.
After you have decided on your general house plans, or even better before, I encourage you to narrow down your household and personal items before you even start your building or framing etc. Why? Well there are just too many benefits to knowing what you want to have in your tiny house before you start, to pass this opportunity up! Not to mention getting yourself in the right mental space well ahead of time, takes a lot of angst out of the process right off the bat. I think for many, the purging of “stuff” is one of the most difficult parts of the process. But if you can manage to get your possession in order prior to building, the rewards will pay off in a very very big way.
For example, there are so many things you can do in your framing and in your design that will really make an enormous difference in the livability of your tiny house. In our case, I knew way ahead of time, that I would need 24”of hanging closet space for myself and for my husband (that saved us buying an extra window that was in our original design, but that would have covered it up in the end with a closet or removed it). I knew I would need at least one wall stud where I wanted my computer screen to be mounted. In the end I actually put two extra studs in the wall where I wanted my computer screen incase I upgraded the screen and needed a larger heavier mount at some point in the future. Knowing that you have “x” amount of books, and book shelves will help you decide on many things. Do you want a window there? Or would you rather have book space, or general shelf space. If you know this ahead of time, you can put a stud there just in case, if a stud doesn’t fall naturally where you would like these types of interior finishes. This holds true for your electrical outlets as well. I have two extra outlets in my house, that don’t have a function now, but are placed under my couch for our “future” rain water purification system. In the end I might not ever use them, but if I do it cost me an extra $20 to have them there, and that piece of mind really helps when you are downsizing in such a monumental way.
The same process was true for my kitchen area. I knew I have a 48” counter area in my tiny kitchen, and that I wanted to have my shelves for my heavy dishes and glassware directly above, so there again, I added one extra stud to that wall so that when the time came to hang my shelves in the kitchen, I wouldn’t have to worry about if the stud lined up perfectly with where I wanted the brackets to go.
Stairs. Oh stairs! I spent a lot of time on figuring out the rise and run of our stairs, and the was a gigantic factor in the layout of our interior (think wheel wells and couches), knowing that I wanted at the very least a 60/65 degree stair, let me know that hey, I need an extra 4’ on this side of the house to allow for the stairs. Can you deal with a 90 degree angle stair, 50 degrees? Stairs are a big one to think about ahead of time, because it’s a large item in the house, that can’t be left till last if you want it to be comfortable for you. We actually taped out different degree stairs at our old house to see how that would feel. Did it invade our living room too much, was it to big?
While we were framing I actually measured my son and husband several times! Stand here. Is this ceiling high enough? Do you feel cramped? In one case, the answer was yes. So we actually changed our 2x6 loft floor joist, to 2x4’s added a few more in, so the strength would be the same, but that gave us an extra 2” of ceiling height! Same thing with the loft ceiling. Instead of running our ¾ ship lap all the way over our ridge board, we had the top two boards, meet the bottom of the ridge board, to give us that extra 3/4” head room in our loft.
It’s these types of changes and planning that can really make a difference in your tiny house. The beauty of the tiny house, is that the framing is very simple, so customizing it is relatively easy. Make your tiny house work for you, think about what’s most important in your everyday living. Are you a cook, who just has to have the giant kitchen aid mixers, and every All-Clad pot and utensil known to mankind, if so, great! Plan that out in your design. Putting away your most prized books to much to bare? Sort all your books according to your “love and devotion” to them. For me, this was the hardest, next to my cowboy boot purge. I literally pulled out every book I owned, and slowly sorted them according to well, this is a must, oh geese this is a must etc. Then in the end I had the amount that I thought would fit.
All of the Tiny House, items were boxed and set aside, packed away for move in day to the tiny house. That left me with the possessions that I knew for sure WEREN’T going.
I basically did this process for each group of items. Office supplies, clothes, dishes, pots, pans, linens. Bathroom junk, purses. Everything. In the end, it really did help set the tone, for what type of items I was brining, and what I would need in the tiny house to store that particular item, and what types of adjustments I could make to the framing building of the house that would accommodate our families needs best.
I hope this post is helpful to future tiny housers that are just beginning their process. It’s my official 2¢ on stuff, and how to plan well in advance for minor and major changes that might make living tiny, a big joy.
(Source: psych-facts, via elige-deactivated20150103)
Mexican Obsidian Arrowhead
(Source: woodyblackwell.com, via )
(Source: observando, via elige-deactivated20150103)