Posted on 04/06/2005 8:18:20 PM PDT by SJackson
Today I suppose youd have to update the station wagon to an SUV, but the fact remains: To live successfully anywhere outside the mainstream of life you must have an unconventional spirit coupled with down-to-earth practicalitya combo that can be hard to find and harder still to balance. I live in the country, but my latest life choices have also involved living in miniature spaceswhich presents an additional set of challenges, both to the soul and to practicality. For the last three years Ive shared a one-room cabin with a pack of dogs and one outnumbered but boldly unflappable cat. The cabin has an exterior footprint of 409 square feetnine feet above the minimum my county requires for a residence. Its interior space is about 360 square feet, including closets and cabinet space. I work as well as live here, so Im in this one room 24 hours a day, except when the critters and I are out dog walking, running errands, picking blackberries, or otherwise adventuring. On winter days, when Im tripping over tails, wiping up muddy pawprints for the umpteenth time, and having accusatory canine noses stuck into my computer (Mom, were booooored!) the cabin sometimes feels as small as a shoebox. On summer afternoons, its luxuriously spacious with its glass door thrown open to sunlight and all its denizens sprawled on the deck. In fact it seems so large that Im currently contemplating spending part of my year in a structure about one third this size. Think dollhouse (or rather, converted garden shed).
Im hardly alone. Even as the size of the average new American house has more than doubled (from 1,100 square feet during the post-WWII housing boom to more than 2,225 by 1999), more and more people are also exploring small-space living. These include, most visibly, RVers spending months in their cleverly designed rolling homelets, simple-living advocates wanting to use fewer resources, homeless camper-dwellers, folks living on boats, and country newcomers (like many readers of this magazine) who are camping out in garages, trailers, cabins, or sheds while building their dream homes. Finally youve got people like me whod rather have 409 paid-for square feet than 2,225 square feet of mortgaged luxury. RVers and boat dwellers have built-in advantages. Literally built-in. RVs and boats, with their endless crannies, hidden storage spaces, and double-purpose furnishings (like tables that turn into beds) provide the construction model for the rest of us.
But theres more to small-space living than just clever design. Living well in tiny spaces has four parts:
Lets take a brief look at all four. Oh, and before we do, Ill confess that a lot of my knowledge comes from what I-didnt-anticipate, or I-didnt-do when I built my cabin. It was a learning experience. Successful copingCopingthe actual art of getting along in that tiny spaceis logically the fourth thing to consider, since after all, you cant do it until youve built and furnished. But unless youre interested in doing what it takes to live small, theres no point in even thinking about the other three steps. Living small inevitably brings some surprises. For instance, most people automatically assume that a smaller house requires less housework than a big one. First learning experience: In small spaces, every dirty dish left on the counter, every pile of bills you set on a tabletop upon return from the Post Office, becomesproportionallya big mess. Unlike in a large house, theyre right there in your face. They might be taking up your only work space or eating area. Also, when all your activities are confined to one small space, that space will get dusty and dirty more quickly than when your activities are spread around 2,000 square feet. So ...
Designing and building for living smallBefore tackling any small-space building or remodeling project, take a look at the interiors of boats and RVs. Make note of their space-saving design featureslike underbed storage, dual-purpose furnishings, fold-up tables, compact water heaters, and especially the way they turn every bit of useless space into a cabinet. Also look at what boat and RV builders do wrong. My friend, Charles Curley, who spent much of his youth ocean sailing, remembers a table whose swing-up leaf kept everybody on one side of the table from being able to reach the kitchen during meals. He recalls another table whose similar leaf had to be folded down every time anyone wanted to get into the refrigerator. Bad design. Just as small spaces can actually be harder to keep clean than large ones, they can also be harder to design because they require more clever attention to picky detail. Some tips:
Helpful gadgets for saving spaceHaving just touted a relatively stuffless existence, its a little ironicoh, but so much funto delve into space-saving gadgets. Its also ironic that so many small gadgets are more expensive than their larger work-alikes. So to keep the budget down, well look at only a few.
Decorating to make small look biggerFinally, when youre ready to move your furniture in:
To people whove never done it, small-space living often sounds cramped and uncomfortable. Certainly it can become that way in a structure thats poorly designed or if you get sloppy in your living habits. But be clever and conscientious and you can have a very nice little life while saving a bundle, not only on construction, but on heating, air conditioning, maintenance, and furnishing. Oh yes, and on top of everything else, youll be giving the taxers a whole lot less to tax than your neighbors whore building those 2,225 square-foot palaces. |
This little trailer was inspired by the gypsy vardos of Europe and shepherds wagons of the American West. The vardo pictured here has optional cedar siding. Inside there is just enough room for a full-sized bed and some shelves or for a free-standing breakfast nook. The Reed floor plan depicts the interior as a mobile office with a stainless steel counter and sink, a retractable table, four small closets, six linear feet of shelving and a stainless steel boat heater to keep things toasty. A bed roll can be tucked away in one of the closets for overnight stays.
409 sq. feet ? Would I be allowed to curl up in my basket ?
I'm actually thinking about one of these small structures for my property - easy to build and maintain, too!
400 square feet describes the vast majority of houses (some known as cabins if they don't have city water) or apartments in this area. Some of my neighbors are in even smaller boxes. 12x12 and 10x12 are not uncommon. 400 square feet in the middle of ten acres isn't intolerable.
As someone who has been living in a 110sq-ft room for 3 years, I can attest that everything he says in this article rings true.
Im moving out at the end of the summer btw. I can hardly contain my excitement about actually having a living room, kitchen, and my own bathroom :) Woohoo
I live small and it works for me.
Yeah, but you would have to put it in a closet when you got up.
Sorry, but this old boy worked hard for many years to afford a house big enough to store all the crap i've accumulated over my lifetime.
I spent 2.5 years living full time on my sailboat - at 44' it had probably about 377 sqft (44x13x.75) and I was perfectly comfortable. The main problem; in the Seattle winter rains, it was a bit claustrophobic.....
Subsequently sailed the boat to San Diego and lived on it for 4 or 5 months every winter for another 10 years there.....absolutely idyllic.
Sold the boat in 2003 to a UAL pilot who lived on it with his wife and young son....they loved it after leaving a 1.0+ million dollar house in San Diego.
The human species is very adaptable to living where ever there is a bit of a challenge....makes life more interesting.
Apparently fomenting revolution hasn't been all that lucrative...
I have it designed - now if I could 'afford" to sell my house and have enough to build one less that half it's size.
I live in the woods - it's the quiet privacy of the country that makes living small, living big. A house is, to me, just something to keep me warm and dry when necc. Otherwise, let me out
thank you I like small things and cozy!
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That's the key: lots of surrounding space. When your living room is the great outdoors, having a tiny bedroom isn't so bad. It's when you don't have much usable outdoor space, when everything has to be done inside, that you crave a 2000+ sq-f home. Suburban developments are where it's worst: just 30 feet to the next house (only 15 of that yours), with practically no space or privacy to do anything in ... no wonder the trend is toward near-mansions with gargantuan TVs.
Ditto that. We got smaller when we moved to the Missouri Ozarks from Minnesota but 400 sq. feet ? I couldn't store all my footware.
Small spaces ping....
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