Re: Communities with a low-cost/affordability focus | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Liz Ryan Cole (lizryancole![]() |
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Date: Sat, 30 Aug 2014 05:29:01 -0700 (PDT) |
good points about tiny house, BUT please do not think of Vermont or NH as having "moderate climates with minimal snow". :) liz Liz Ryan Cole lizryancole [at] me.com Pinnacle Cohousing at Loch Lyme Lodge Lyme, NH Home 802.785.4124 Work 802.831.1240 Lodge 603-795-2141 I arise in the morning torn between a desire to improve the world and a desire to enjoy the world. This makes it hard to plan the day.” ― E.B. White On Aug 29, 2014, at 8:05 PM, William New wrote: > On Wed, 27 Aug 2014 19:39:39 -0400, Sharon Villines <sharon [at] > sharonvillines.com> wrote: > > a tiny house village posted a few weeks ago that was built for homeless people http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/08/21/tiny-houses-aim-help-homeless/14411661/ http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2014/08/tiny_houses_as_affordable_hous.html http://kxan.com/2014/08/27/50346/ I am aware of two of such tiny house “villages” in Portland (plus soon Eugene) and Austin, with a number of other US towns following their positive results. A recent economic analysis showed that the highest “cost" of a tiny house is the land (urban = expensive, rural = affordable) versus the transport cost incurred to get to shops, schools, jobs, medical care, etc. The constructed cost of the tiny house itself (if built on flat-bed trailer wheels) is largely independent of the site, especially using solar electricity, composting toilets, propane cooking/heat. Urban sites allow bicycles and easy public transport; rural sites require a car or similar transportation. The most cost effective alternative all-weather personal transportation will likely be the Elio: www.eliomotors.com Truly low-cost tiny houses are feasible for rural co-housing groups who are largely self-sufficient: retired, self-employed, work-from-home employment, etc — best examples being pensioners, authors/artists, software developers, Internet-based workers — who have gardens for their primary food supply, and UPS/FedEx service from Amazon/etc to deliver goods ordered online. Home-schooling also works extremely well with Internet access (satellite-based in rural areas). The biggest challenge in general are zoning issues along with utility permits, though off-the-grid self-sufficiency plus flat-bed trailer (read, state motor vehicle jurisdiction) obviates most of these obstacles in unincorprated non-municipal locales. The most practical approach is to find an older rural farm home (+ barn/sheds) to renovate as the commons house, then add tiny houses one by one as needed. If worse comes to worse, one can simply roll away the tiny houses to another site, though if the co-housing cluster is invisible from a public road (typical zoning requirement) and invisible to neighbors (easy in wooded area), most municipal authorities are content to live and let live. Finding inexpensive older rural homes suitable for renovation/commons use, with ample acreage for gardens and woodlot, is fairly easy in moderate climates with minimal snow (Oregon, Northern California, Vermont, Arkansas, North Carolina, etc). Tiny houses can be site-built, or manufactured elsewhere and transported to the property. With sun and water, nearly any “invisible” site works well. Low-cost/affordibility is indeed a substantive challenge, especially in/near cities. But small rural towns with ageing populations where youngsters have left for city bright lights are very hospitable to those looking for a sustainable lifestyle. === Bill —— William New MD StillCreek Commons Santa Cruz, CA 94062-0951 wnew [at] stillcreek.net _________________________________________________________________ Cohousing-L mailing list -- Unsubscribe, archives and other info at: http://www.cohousing.org/cohousing-L/
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Communities with a low-cost/affordability focus Diana Porter, August 29 2014
- Re: Communities with a low-cost/affordability focus Dane Laverty, September 1 2014
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Re: Communities with a low-cost/affordability focus William New, August 29 2014
- Re: Communities with a low-cost/affordability focus Liz Ryan Cole, August 30 2014
- Re: Communities with a low-cost/affordability focus Jerry McIntire, August 31 2014
- Re: Communities with a low-cost/affordability focus Fred-List manager, September 4 2014
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