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$1,200 DIY Tiny House Plans for Sale!


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These are the $1,200 Tiny France DIY House Plans.

A couple weeks ago we shared the amazing Tiny France, a $1,200 house by Czech architect Joshua Woodsman (aka, Vojtěch Valda).

Turns out Woodsman is selling the plans for this incredibly inexpensive build on his website for $39.

$1,200 Tiny France DIY House Plans for Sale!

Images via Pin Up Houses

Images via Pin Up Houses

Video: France Prefab Tiny House by Pin-Up Houses

Highlights: 

  • Cost £1,000 (approx. $1,200) in materials
  • Made from 21 insulated panels
  • Plans include complete set of plans; construction progress + comments; complete material list + tool list
  • $39 for plans
  • Panels can be reassembled in a few hours

Resources: 

Our big thanks to Joshua for sharing!

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Natalie C. McKee

Natalie C. McKee is a contributor for Tiny House Talk and the Tiny House Newsletter. She's a wife, and mama of three little kids. She and her family are homesteaders with sheep, goats, chickens, ducks and quail on their happy little acre.
{ 13 comments… add one }
  • emilio murillo
    December 8, 2016, 3:07 pm

    no bathroom , the design is not finished

    • Don Robarge
      December 8, 2016, 4:08 pm

      Simply incorporate another module.

    • Alex
      December 9, 2016, 8:30 am

      you can use an outhouse separately

  • Don Robarge
    December 8, 2016, 4:12 pm

    As a builder I like these simple DIY insulated standard panels, EZ build you would hope for in a simply Tiny, good design. Not attracted to the Mod wall, but that’s easy to adjust. ;~) Aloha

  • Sally Schrock
    December 9, 2016, 4:55 pm

    For $3500 I acquired not one, but TWO vintage mobile homes this summer and fall. One is a single story, 500-square-foot 1961 Spartan Sparcraft Statesman (10×50) with two bedrooms, one bath, kitchen and living room. It’s in excellent condition and ready for me to move into, which I will be doing this spring.

    The other one is a 1959 two-story Pacemaker with 740 square feet of living space with three bedrooms (two upstairs with a half bath in between), 1-1/2 baths, a LR and front end kitchen. While in very good condition, it does need restoration with regard to water-damaged paneling around some windows and in an upstairs bedroom ceiling, as well as the exterior skin, before it can be considered livable. I expect it to cost me in the neighborhood of $10-15,000, but even so, that’s far less than what many stick built THOWs are going for nowadays. I would much rather live in a roomier and much cheaper vintage mobile home than a THOW any time–and they have OODLES of charm and character to boot!

    • Natalie
      December 12, 2016, 1:38 pm

      I think it’s awesome that you are recycling and reusing! — Tiny House Talk Team

      • Sally Schrock
        December 12, 2016, 2:10 pm

        Thank you, Natalie! I’m not the only one going towards living in vintage mobile homes/RVs; other folks are choosing the same path. There are several Facebook groups devoted to vintage mobile homes and trailers, as well several special interest groups devoted to Spartans, Streamline trailers and Airstreams, etc., etc.

        I have a Facebook page up about “Sweet Sixteen”, my 1959 Pacemaker (so named because she sat on Lot #16 for more than 40 years in a mobile home park in Wahoo, NE, before being rescued from demolition this past summer) at this link: https://www.facebook.com/sweet16VintagePacemakerMH/

  • ZACHARY E. MOHRMANN
    December 11, 2016, 6:52 pm

    Viva La France….!

    • Natalie
      December 12, 2016, 1:05 pm

      Seriously! — Tiny House Talk Team

  • Ken
    December 14, 2016, 12:52 am

    On the FRANCE plans for 39.00
    Do you get hard copy of the plan mailed to me in Canada?
    Thank you

    • Natalie
      December 14, 2016, 10:54 am

      Hi Ken, You’d have to contact the architect directly to ask about that. I think they are all online, not hard copies, but he could tell you for sure. — Tiny House Talk Team

  • Ken Canada
    December 14, 2016, 6:17 am

    In Alberta Canada where I live , mobile home parks will not allow
    older mobile homes to stay in the park unless they are upgraded.
    This means rounded roofs must have peaked roofs. Outsides of
    the moble home must have fire guard siding. The inside must
    have new drywall, new flooring and new safety upgrades.
    Some owners try to move rather than do upgrades, but other mobile
    home parks will not allow older mobile homes.

    • Natalie
      December 14, 2016, 10:53 am

      Wow! Thanks for that insight. Didn’t know that. — Tiny House Talk Team

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