Why Tiny Houses Are So Popular

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One of the many benefits of building a tiny house is the ability to manage, design, and complete the build yourself.
One of the many benefits of building a tiny house is the ability to manage, design, and complete the build yourself.
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"Microshelters" is filled to the rafters with tips, floor plans, concept sketches, step-by-step building plans, guidelines for utilization of recycled and salvaged materials, and inspired decorating ideas that will be useful to newbies and experienced makers alike.

From basic to brain-bending, Microshelters (Storey Publishing, 2015) by Derek “Deek” Diedricksen offers a stunning photographic survey of 59 of the most creative and awe-inspiring designs for little cabins, tiny houses, “shoffices” (shed-offices), kids forts and more. The curated collection includes work by some of the leading bloggers, architects, and designers in the “tiny” field. What they all have in common is a flair for creative design and the ability to innovatively maximize the use of space within a minimal footprint.

You can purchase this book from the MOTHER EARTH NEWS store: Microshelters.

What’s With the Tiny Obsession?

I’ve been asked this question many times, and there’s no easy answer. I just dig tiny, cozy structures. As to why, there are numerous reasons, some you might not anticipate.

Creating a microstructure involves creative thinking, outdoor activity, and problem-solving — things many people crave but often find absent from their busy (and sometimes repetitious and regimented) modern lives. And not only is it a relatively affordable pursuit, it also requires far less time and patience than building something of “ginormous” proportions. That’s the beauty of very tiny projects: they’re easy on both the wallet and the mind. Their small size also makes them easy on the neighbors.

  • Published on Feb 26, 2016
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