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“Azure” Lumbec Coach House Kit


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This is the “Azure” Lumbec Coach House Kit, a new 3-D design of a “small house” I’d love to live in.

The home is great for anyone who doesn’t like lofts and would like the 640 sq. ft. of living space. Because it’s a kit you get all the “pieces” and can still DIY the build, which is pretty cool! See everything it includes below.

Related: Small House Kits by Modern-Shed

“Azure” Lumbec Coach House

Images via Lumbec

Related: Eco Friendly Prefab Timber Frame House Kit

Images via Lumbec

Related: 136 Sq. Ft. Lumbec Tiny House on Wheels

Highlights: 

  • “Azure” model
  • $53,999 CAD (Approx. $41,112 USD)
  • 20×32
  • Bedroom
  • Bathroom with washer/dryer
  • Combination kitchen and living room
  • Available as kit only (“self-constructor system”)
  • Isoslab 12-inch structural slab kit, including perimeter modules, interior sections for radiant heating system, metal beams for the exterior module belt, and frost perimeter protection system
  • Kit includes:
  • Exterior walls in high-performance insulated panels in sections from 4 ‘to 8’
  • Freestanding framing
  • Floors and joists for the section above the bedroom and the bathroom
  • Insulated roof, including cathedral roof trusses.
  • Laflamme PVC exterior steel doors and windows with exterior color, white on the inside.
  • Membrane and roofing in pre-painted steel.
  • In the exterior finish, you will receive the following items:
  • Board and batten pine finish with opaque stain including 8 years warranty on finish and 50 years on wood.
  • Corners and moldings for the perimeter of the openings.
  • Accessories such as sealant, nails and retouching paint for your interior finish
  • Gypsum for all interior surfaces.
  • Moldings and interior framing, basic model.
  • The interior doors.
  • Kit does not include: Excavation, reinforcement and concrete for the slab, finishing of the slab, pergola, installation of the framing and elements mentioned above, plumbing, electricity, joints, painting, kitchen cabinets and built-in furniture, furniture and appliances, septic.
  • For shipping costs and further information, please contact our team via Email: [email protected]; Phone: 819-684-5291

Resources: 

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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.

Latest posts by Natalie C. McKee (see all)

{ 16 comments… add one }
  • Claude
    January 30, 2017, 3:27 pm

    Very nice, another reasonably price home with good living space.

    • Natalie C. McKee
      January 31, 2017, 7:41 am

      That it is!

  • Wendy
    January 30, 2017, 5:11 pm

    This ‘kit house’ style is much more eco-friendly than regular housing construction as the kit has no waste materials to go to landfill. Apparently construction material waste is a huge part of current landfills.

    • Natalie C. McKee
      January 31, 2017, 7:38 am

      Although I love the idea of kit homes, don’t you think that the waste is probably at the plant where they compile the kits? I think there’s waste because you don’t get precise cuts, etc., and whoever cut these to the right lengths likely had waste left over.

      • February 1, 2017, 6:15 am

        Thanks for the article and comments. I will take one minute to respond to the waste question. In any prefab manufacturing plant, there is minimal waste and overcut. Cut list are optimized and unused material is used on the next production. Because there is a repetition in houses, those cut list get better and better.

        • Natalie C. McKee
          February 1, 2017, 8:46 am

          Thanks Martin! Great to hear 🙂 Love that!

  • Michael
    January 30, 2017, 6:23 pm

    It has everything a couple is in need of although you have probably the same amount to spend to get it live in ready.

    • Natalie C. McKee
      January 31, 2017, 7:36 am

      Ya that’s likely true, Michael. But even at $80,000, you get a lot!

  • Danielle DiLisio
    January 30, 2017, 9:19 pm

    Love it! Great layout and seems very spacious : )

    • Natalie C. McKee
      January 31, 2017, 7:31 am

      That it does!

  • ZACHARY E MOHRMANN
    January 30, 2017, 10:30 pm

    Well it is big, but so fairly priced…! It’s a tiny house that everyone could fall in love with….

    • Natalie C. McKee
      January 31, 2017, 7:31 am

      Yes I really loved this. I want to see one built 🙂

    • oxide
      January 31, 2017, 1:44 pm

      No, it’s not fairly priced.

      The spec sheet says: “Kit does not include: Excavation, reinforcement and concrete for the slab, finishing of the slab, pergola, installation of the framing and elements mentioned above, plumbing, electricity, joints, painting, kitchen cabinets and built-in furniture, furniture and appliances, septic.”

      So your $41K basically buys you the materials for a shell… and you still have to build it, AND then put the house parts in it, not to mention find the LAND for it. At the end of the day, this looks like any old $80K house. At least you get a real bedroom.

    • jm
      January 31, 2017, 4:38 pm

      This could be a real “Dugh” moment. Kit houses NEVER include foundations because they have no idea of the soil conditions and terrain you’re building on. Also no septic, site utilities, and NO LABOR of assembling! HUGE costs. (Someone is not reading…)
      But, pre-fabs do generate less waste since much is done with jigs, pre-cutting, etc. AND indoors eliminating the weather factor. (Nice to have dry framing…)
      However…I would not buy a kit house or container house without having THE PERMIT IN HAND. Buy the land (if you must) and submit all plans (they should give you all those for free in return for purchasing once you have permit).
      THAT would be the only way for me.

  • ZACHARY E MOHRMANN
    January 31, 2017, 6:28 pm

    I meant it facetiously …! If anyone should know by now by following Tiny House Talk, I am totally dead set against permanent structures as they do not pertain to the tiny house movement what so ever, and the usual comeback to that is tiny house talk tries to give other ideas or views as well… or something along those lines when I say it… So I was being facetious when saying it was so big and yet so affordable….! Duh….!

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