Monday, November 14, 2016
Houseboat on Dry Land as a Tiny Home
How's this for a weird sounding tiny house idea? Build a houseboat on pontoons, then park it on dry land and live in it. That's what someone in Connecticut did.
My former next door neighbor built this houseboat in the backyard of his business location. When he finished it he actually used it on the water for many years. Eventually, he had it moved back to where he built it, landscaped around it a bit, and moved in. I understand from communicating with him via email recently that he lives in it on a full-time basis for about half the year. That's because he's retired now and he spends the other half of the year in Florida. Someday I hope to get back to the area, catch him at home in the houseboat, and get some photos of the inside. I'd love to see how he laid-out the interior, wouldn't you?
My former next door neighbor built this houseboat in the backyard of his business location. When he finished it he actually used it on the water for many years. Eventually, he had it moved back to where he built it, landscaped around it a bit, and moved in. I understand from communicating with him via email recently that he lives in it on a full-time basis for about half the year. That's because he's retired now and he spends the other half of the year in Florida. Someday I hope to get back to the area, catch him at home in the houseboat, and get some photos of the inside. I'd love to see how he laid-out the interior, wouldn't you?
The crazy thing is, for all the talk you hear about how difficult it is to find a place to legally live in a tiny home, and with all the sneaking around and flying below the radar that tiny homeowners do, this place is out in the open on a busy street. Anyone driving by could spot it easily, and literally thousands of people drive by it every day. The icing on this particular cake is that it's not in a sleepy backwater, it's in an expensive Connecticut shoreline town where the current average listing price is $839,000. This is not a place where they ignore zoning laws.
Next time I talk with the owner I'll have to ask him how he did it.
Next time I talk with the owner I'll have to ask him how he did it.
Enjoy this post? Share it with friends using the social networking buttons below. Like the FaceBook page, facebook.com/smallscalehomes. Join the conversation, or start one in the comments below. Thanks!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment