Building with pallets: Doug Calderone contributes a post on Tiny House Blog about his project of building a tiny house out of salvaged wood shipping pallets. He started by looking into the various kinds and sources of pallets he could find. Then, after collecting a dozen truckloads of pallets, he experimented with building with them. First came Adirondack chairs, then a chicken coop. He says:
"Pallets need to be looked at as building blocks, like Legos for example. Drawing up plans is still a good idea, but the dimensions and structural integrity of pallets needs to be the main factor in design."
Calderone's tiny house is still to come, but there's a bunch of information here for anyone interested in using pallets for construction.
Pallet House: Jetson Green discusses a 250-square-foot prototype home made out of salvaged wood pallets and designed by I-Beam Design:
"The project was built using 100 recycled pallets placed by 4-5 workers with hand tools. The 250-square foot prototype home takes no more than a week to raise and can be used as a transitional shelter or as an alternative to something like a tent."
Tiny house for family of four: A recent episode of "Anderson" featured a couple who chose to downsize radically when they encountered financial adversity, with a plan to rebuild their lives. Mother Nature Network says:
"After losing their business, a restaurant, during the recession, Carl and Hari sold their comfortable three-bedroom, 1,500-square-foot home and began living in an 168-square-foot shed built primarily from Craigstlist-sourced reclaimed materials for $12,000. While the 8-by-12-foot tiny home is mighty cute, let's not forget that the Carl and Hari aren't its only inhabitants: their two elementary school-aged children live there as well, sharing a sleeping loft above the bathroom."
Hari explains in the video that they're now able to bank her whole salary. "The tiny house is part of a long-term plan to build a mortgage-free, larger house -- but the house will still be small," she says. They want each person to have some private space; plus they yearn for a bathtub.
About the tiny house, she says: "We just have exactly what we need, and not a lot more."
-- Pat Jeffries
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