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Tiny House Living: Your Mini Guide to Making Best of Your Tiny Home with Building Tips and Decorating Ideas: Tiny House
Tiny House Living: Your Mini Guide to Making Best of Your Tiny Home with Building Tips and Decorating Ideas: Tiny House
Tiny House Living: Your Mini Guide to Making Best of Your Tiny Home with Building Tips and Decorating Ideas: Tiny House
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Tiny House Living: Your Mini Guide to Making Best of Your Tiny Home with Building Tips and Decorating Ideas: Tiny House

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For anyone that has wished to get out there and grab life by the reigns. The enchanting world of “tiny homes” holds a very special allure. Saddling up to live in a space that is smaller than most studio apartments is a big leap for most of us. But if you are informed and know what you are doing you can go a long way with the latest in tiny home designs. Since the trend has advanced, so have the choices. In what was once a very obscure market decked out with a very small variety of tiny homes has turned into a veritable smorgasbord of tiny home consumption.

And as the supply and demand rapidly increase for these homes the possibilities they present will increase as well. So as you way out the options, use this book as your guide. The information contained here will lead you through the markets, dealerships, licensing agencies and construction firms until you finally have that tiny house you always dreamed of!

Some things that we will cover in this book include:

  • Finding and Buying a Tiny House
  • The Basics of Tiny Home Construction
  • Furniture and other arrangements for Tiny House Living
  • A guide to setting up permanent residence for your Tiny Home

Don’t Delay. Download This Book Now.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherGuava Books
Release dateFeb 3, 2017
ISBN9781386732761
Tiny House Living: Your Mini Guide to Making Best of Your Tiny Home with Building Tips and Decorating Ideas: Tiny House

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    Tiny House Living - Gram Harris

    Introduction

    You usually don’t begin a book that is supposed to be promoting something by highlighting all of its problems in your introduction! But to be as transparent and nonbiased as possible in our overview of what Tiny House living has to offer, we wanted to dispel the most negative rumors and innuendo swirling around the Tiny Home phenomenon. Since tiny homes began their most recent incarnation in the 1980’s under the direction of architect Lester Walker, they have been routinely derided and ridiculed. Critics in Walker’s day told him rather bluntly that his idea would never catch on; we see today that these critics have been roundly disproven.

    But even though the popularity of tiny homes has soared, the criticism remains. And the charge that is most often leveled at the tiny house is that they are structurally unsound and unsafe. It was to remedy this charge that a group of small home enthusiasts formed the American Tiny House Association in 2015. This group was galvanized in light of such critiques and became determined to promote the tiny house as a viable and socially acceptable mode of living. And in order to bridge this gulf the Tiny House Association sought out partnerships with local governmental agencies to come to a comprehensive understanding of just how zoning and coding enforcement policies should be shaped in regard to the tiny house.

    It was out of these many discussions that it was determined that the biggest problem that tiny house enthusiasts faced was not the structure of the houses themselves, but being able to have a safe and stable place to put the house after it was built. The primary concern in light of their findings was the zoning regulations that put a cap in the square footage of what can be considered a habitable home. According to these laws tiny houses do not comprise enough square feet to be permanently parked on a foundation in a residential area.

    It was because of this same problem that Lester Walker first had the ingenious idea to put the tiny house on the wheels of a trailer bed. That way it would be considered a mobile home and could be safely parked under that classification. But even this loophole has been confronted with considerable pushback in recent times and

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