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It is funny for me to turn on HGTV and see a small house about the size of my own called an “Extreme Home.” For me, and I am sure for most tiny house dwellers, these little spaces are just “home,” not extreme at all. On Thursday, December 6th HGTV aired a segment on tiny house bloggers Tammy Strobel and Logan Smith along with their tiny home designer Dee Williams.
The segment, only a few minutes long, was a quick look into the way tiny house owners live their daily lives. The integration of their environment to their daily activities is most notable and I think is one of the most fascinating things I notice about people who chose to simplify their lives in this way. None of us just slog through life waiting for the next thing to happen to us. We are people who take control of our world and face it deliberately. They focus on Tammy leaving her corporate job to pursue writing. I believe that this drastic lifestyle overhaul is what allows many of us to live our dreams.
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Tammy and Logan’s tiny house is well designed and when the show was aired it was tucked in a back yard in Portland, Oregon. Tammy mentions loving to relax and sleep in her loft. Her cats agree, as they can be found sleeping there throughout the segment. Logan and Tammy have since relocated their little house to California.
This isn’t the first time that tiny houses have appeared on HGTV. On the Labor Day 2010 episode of Design Star, the contestants were charged with decorating the interiors of three small houses designed by Tumbleweed Tiny House Company. It was interesting to watch these interior designers over-fill these houses with stand-alone furniture and shelves full of knick-knacks. They seemed to miss the concept of tiny living all together in favor of creating visual designs to wow the judges.
It seems as though Tiny Houses have moved a little bit beyond counter culture. Right now they may be in the novelty stage for average Americans but as bigger audiences are exposed to the tiny house movement it will begin attracting more people genuinely interested in changing their lives. Even those who have no intention of transitioning to a 120 Square Foot house, some of the ideas and lessons that can be learned from downsizing and changing your attitude can lead to some pretty positive cultural changes.
Laura LaVoie is a contributor for Tiny House Talk who lives off the grid in a 120 square foot tiny house in the mountains near Asheville, North Carolina. She and her husband built the home themselves with the help of some friends. Learn more about Laura at her blog 120squarefeet.com.
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More Like This: Tiny Houses | People Trying to Live in a Tiny House | THOW
Sources:
- http://www.hgtv.com/extreme-homes/zigzag-gryphon-nest/index.html
- http://loganblairsmith.com/
- http://www.diynetwork.com/
- http://relaxshacks.blogspot.com/
This post contains affiliate links.
Laura LaVoie
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Good post, Laura.
As you’ve referred to in another article, in the UK Channel 4 recently aired a series based on small/tiny houses, although there was an emphasis on many of the examples only being for weekend/holiday use, although the presenter did visit the apartment in Barcelona featured below.
https://tinyhousetalk.com/transforming-tiny-apartment-in-barcelona/
I believe there’s also going to be a one-off Christmas special episode as well.
(TBH my only disappointments with it was that there was no reference/acknowledgement of the Tiny House movement in the US during the series, nor of some other higher-profile UK examples of tiny living projects, e.g. http://www.cubeproject.org.uk/).
As an ardent supporter of the Small Home Movement, finding a blog for the Park Model segment is an issue. After working with Tiny Texas houses and being simi converted to that philosophy, I still look at Park Models as a stepping stone to down sizing. I try to design alternatives to what trailer House manufactures put on the market. When bottom line is the only goal it’s hard to get past “Bigger is Better” with them. 189 sq.ft. is fine for couples that have worked out their personality issues. That accounts for half a million people, I think 400 sq.ft. can fit another 30 million if done in a more ergonomic and expressive way.
How do I find places you can put these on your own property instead of paying for a campsite or rv park?
I saw a couple of shows on HGTV that built tiny homes for less than $25,000, the websites I’ve been able to find are going from $40k-70k for a tiny house. If I were wanting to pay that much for one I’d just buy a normal sized house. I’m looking for a house less than 400 sq ft that you can pull behind you and move to wherever you happen to want to live. HGTV had some fantastic tiny house that were so ingenious in their design and their looks were fantastic. Is there anyone in eastern NC that builds tiny houses on wheels that you can live in and still move if you decide to see other parts of the country? Oh yeah . . and not go broke buying one . . lol. I live in eastern NC right now but am thinking of relocating to Seattle and would like to take my home with me . . it’ll be enough taking on a new job, making new friends . . learning to not be with other southerners . . lol, without having to worry about a mortgage payment on top of that for a place I may decide I don’t really love enough to settle down at.