Turning a shed into a tiny home to survive what is coming. Or room for some help at your house.

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • #bugoutbag #prepping #survival #bugoutcabin#tinyhouse #diy

Комментарии • 847

  • @klausschwabshubris
    @klausschwabshubris Год назад +348

    I’ve been living in a tiny home for almost 4 years now, no mortgage and minimal bills.

    • @ian5780
      @ian5780 Год назад +18

      Great reset, but our way kinda. I like it. It's in your own terms that you live frugally.

    • @richrock455
      @richrock455 Год назад +11

      And no Room for anything

    • @TUKByV
      @TUKByV Год назад +16

      ​@@richrock455 and?

    • @klausschwabshubris
      @klausschwabshubris Год назад +45

      @@richrock455 stop buying useless stuff and it won’t be a problem.

    • @joansmith6844
      @joansmith6844 Год назад +3

      @@richrock455one set of cloths ur living with lol

  • @blee9668
    @blee9668 Год назад +116

    I just did this. My house is 10x16. I’m off grid, I can heat my whole house all winter with four truck loads of wood. Use rain catchment. I have chickens, a big garden. Best thing I ever did!!

    • @mhammer5
      @mhammer5 Год назад +16

      Sounds great. You have reduced the government control factor a bunch. I am in a house right now in a city that is good in Oklahoma, bought in 1996. I have an acreage I bought in 1979. Working on it.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      ​@@mhammer5 shoot bro the government control factor is there but honestly whats up there too would be the bank control factor. If you loan too much and run put of money the bank will repo the shed you finished to be mansion quality on the inside, and they seize your land and resell it. So the cheaper the place the easier to pay off. Keeps the bank and the goobermint away

    • @wyndimoore9121
      @wyndimoore9121 Год назад +9

      You are living my dream! I have an acre of raw land, and I’m in the process of getting the trees thinned/cleared. The goal is to put a 10x16 side lofted barn out there early next year and eventually have chickens and a garden. Great way to live!

    • @blee9668
      @blee9668 Год назад +15

      @@wyndimoore9121 the funny thing is, it was kind of forced on me. My husband suffers from severe PTSD and TBI from Iraq. Last winter he dropped me and my dog off at a old farm house I owned. We survived the winter with no heat, barely any food or water. I made up my mind it would never happen again. That’s when I started building my tiny home, got a wood stove… then I found I really loved the freedom of living this way. I’ll never go back to living on the grid. I found my happiness! :)

    • @streetsharkz
      @streetsharkz Год назад

      Whereabouts?

  • @clydenail7747
    @clydenail7747 Год назад +185

    Imagine an entire community of these, with common areas, populated by older retired folks, without families that could share chores and help support a "prepper community" with their wisdom and knowledge. It would offer a tremendous opportunity for single older folks.

    • @hardworkingamerican8847
      @hardworkingamerican8847 Год назад +5

      True .

    • @lyndabell1966
      @lyndabell1966 Год назад +14

      🙏 I'm 62 and live in 10x14 shed right now in my mom's backyard so that I can take care of her. She has dementia. When she passes or goes to elderly home I will become homeless unless I can find a situation like you've suggested, and move my tiny little safe place😢

    • @StephanieJoRountree
      @StephanieJoRountree Год назад +9

      @@lyndabell1966 What about your mom's home? Can't you live there after she passes?

    • @thenannywoodforest98
      @thenannywoodforest98 Год назад +11

      I would love a tiny community of like minded people.

    • @lyndabell1966
      @lyndabell1966 Год назад +3

      @@StephanieJoRountree I would never be able to afford it 😪

  • @beardpapa7306
    @beardpapa7306 Год назад +352

    On our 300 acre property we built 3 tiny homes for each one of our kids and put them all together on there own piece of the property. They each have a small bathroom and kitchenette along with heat and running water. In the middle of their little compound we put a huge fire pit and their own driveway and parking area in the woods. When the kids aren’t there we Airbnb them out to gain revenue. It’s been the best thing we could have done and it gives the kids an area to party and gather away from the old folks.

    • @sandrajohnson9926
      @sandrajohnson9926 Год назад +13

      Nice idea!!
      We have thought about doing this, as well, to rent out as hunting lodge for deer or Retreat over the weekend.

    • @gregrobertson9957
      @gregrobertson9957 Год назад +9

      Beautiful!

    • @beardpapa7306
      @beardpapa7306 Год назад +20

      @@sandrajohnson9926 we do the Airbnb because of the skiing and tourists love the foliage in VT that there is usually a waiting list of people wanting to rent out these cabins. Living in the middle of nowhere and in the woods had an appeal to a lot of people and it’s nice to make an income off what we’ve built for our kids. It’s all going to them in the end.

    • @AGirlHasNoName1.168
      @AGirlHasNoName1.168 Год назад +26

      Would you adopt me?? 😏

    • @christinastpierre3052
      @christinastpierre3052 Год назад +4

      Awesome! I would love to do this for my girls. If only I had more property, I have 3 and a half acres but my country is so strict no way to make it happen! I was gonna try but they (the county) put a stop to that!!!!

  • @royallioness6282
    @royallioness6282 Год назад +120

    My husband and I built a 30x30 "barndominium" in 2016. We took special care in ultra insulation and l designed in lots of "hidden" amenities. Once the slab foundation was laid and the metal exterior was raised, everything else we did, ourselves. Sold off a few cows, and it's paid for. Less than $20,000 and a lot of blisters and sweat. Where we live, permits weren't needed, but we still followed local code. A mini split keeps it cool in the summer and a small gas heater keeps us toasty in the winter. Did have to pay a big amount for the electric company to run lines. We're both in our 60s.

    • @dave-yeahthatsme3925
      @dave-yeahthatsme3925 Год назад +7

      if you don't mind me asking what state are you in? i am looking for a place with no zoning or permits. thank you

    • @royallioness6282
      @royallioness6282 Год назад +8

      @@dave-yeahthatsme3925 Arkansas

    • @dave-yeahthatsme3925
      @dave-yeahthatsme3925 Год назад +5

      @@royallioness6282 ok thank you

    • @abundantlivingfarms
      @abundantlivingfarms Год назад +2

      did you go with a company that pre-makes them?? If so, which one?

    • @royallioness6282
      @royallioness6282 Год назад +5

      @@abundantlivingfarmsI drew up the blue prints, hubby did the dirt work for the foundation, had a company pour the foundation and a family member with fabrication skills helped with the frame and placing the outer "skin". I know there are companies that do this, I had looked at estimates but, due to the expense of a "company". We used our family and a couple of friends with the knowledge base and skills. I'm thankful my father was a master carpenter and cabinet maker, he imparted his wisdom. The only utility we didn't do ourselves, was installing the gas lines. Hubby had to do everything that required a ladder, as I don't do "heights" lol

  • @rustywalleye2875
    @rustywalleye2875 Год назад +100

    My wife and I lived in an 8x10 tiny house built on a frame that we gutted from an old pop up camper. It cost us $600 in 2019 to do that and we built it in the state forest. We lived in it and got a storage unit. Slept in the truck for four months or so with our 80lb dog until we had enough to get a mortgage with the record low interest rates. Got the house before the housing market went haywire. I would recommend doing this idea to someone! Get the land situation figured out first if you can but otherwise a couple of weeks is all it takes to build a really nice livable scenario.

    • @rustywalleye2875
      @rustywalleye2875 Год назад +23

      Sorry, couldn't edit but we basically lived in that tiny house for 2 years but we slept under truck topper for 4 months with the dog.

    • @melinda6546
      @melinda6546 Год назад +17

      Awesome! Y'all are an inspiration!

    • @KB-ke3fi
      @KB-ke3fi Год назад

      Until the government takes your land. That will be next. Watch.

  • @elizabethmabry8061
    @elizabethmabry8061 Год назад +61

    Dave, we are living in a larger one of these sheds right now. It’s definitely comfortable and very easy to clean! We put in plumbing and a wood burning stove to heat it. We had spray foam insulation put in it and it keeps it warm and cool. No monthly payment and it’s ours. It can be done.

    • @kathyfoster7468
      @kathyfoster7468 Год назад +1

      Where is it you take shelter when tornadoes come?

  • @backachershomestead
    @backachershomestead Год назад +15

    Beware of using shipping containers. As a contractor and worked for a company that shipped over seas. If you live in an area with weather changes" temperature " container walls will sweat. Once you build walls the moisture is now trapped behind walls and ceilings . It's almost impossible to stop it from happening. Told a neighbor about it when he went to.finish his out. First year they had ice cycles hang from ceilings and then ice on walls. Interior was heated but outside Temps up and down 30s - 50s. They have black mold in the container now. I have seen others on RUclips talk about the same issues. My containers with tools in them sweat through fall,winter and spring. Just something to think about.

    • @TUKByV
      @TUKByV Год назад +2

      Some people have to learn the hardest way.

    • @GWAYGWAY1
      @GWAYGWAY1 Год назад +1

      @ Back Achers Homestead ….The only way to cure this problem is to spray foam on the interior first. This seals and insulates the metal, but is expensive.

    • @backachershomestead
      @backachershomestead Год назад +1

      @Graham Dawes as long as they use the correct foam, there are different types. Some are open cell. When we built pole barns later the owner would have them sprayed with foam. Any wood contacting metal was a thermal break. It would sweat there and also foam would take on moisture. Same issue they have when sprayed in box sill of homes. Causing mold and rot to sill and rim joist of house.

    • @matthewvalentine3549
      @matthewvalentine3549 Год назад

      Spray foam insulation should stop this issue

    • @backachershomestead
      @backachershomestead Год назад

      @Matthew Valentine not always all it takes is a very small air gap against outside wall to create sweating. And can go from there. I have personally seen it.

  • @wendya.presley7316
    @wendya.presley7316 Год назад +9

    I am doing this now. I bought mine from the Amish a shell and I'm finishing it myself. I wish I'd done it a long time ago. I'm in the country no codesI paid 8k for 400 Sq ft cabin. Empty shell.

  • @VernonSchwartz
    @VernonSchwartz Год назад +37

    My fiancee and I bought a crappy 8x16. Fixed it up and we stay in it as we're building a small 900 sq ft house. We're doing all the building ourselves. The money that would go towards rent is going into the house.
    The 8x16 was just a shell. We put in a small counter, a toilet, and a standup shower. The bed takes up half the room but it's only temporary.
    You don't have to be well-off. We both deliver pizza and we're almost finished with the house which is paid for. Putting siding on it now.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад +2

      Nice. Its nice to see two people on the come up and youre not inventing robots, just delivering pizza and building. Building yourself is free money in the bank if you build it right. I want to buy a couple 3 or 4 of these sheds and i want to learn to finish them inside to a really high standard so they hold their value and im going to place them through the southwest spaced far enough away ill be able to travel into colorado for summer time work and then down to new mexico texas and florida for work in the winter. Im trying to budget so I travel by motorcycle and so i need a shed equiped to store and work on motorcycles. I figure if I spend 10k on each place and finish them myself i only need about 40k and i can pop enough locations down i can leave one place and travel to the next in a day so every night i dont have to buy a hotel whuch just sucks my money down and im not working hard just to drain the money. Hotels are nice but i travel too much and i really need a place where if my bike is breaking down i have an actual home i can leave it at. If i have no homes inbetween colorado and florida and I break down, the tow gets expensive. Plus im going to learn to finish them real quality so theyll hold value and when im done theyll be portable so i can sell the land wothout them or with them when im done and i can travel back and forth for my different work in different seasons and save lots of money that way in the ling run. As opposed to if i had 1 nicer house or an apartment i rent and then also pay hotel fees etc.

  • @ht8259
    @ht8259 Год назад +74

    I have a 10x20 as an office. 35 yr old female. Got electric in it but then finished inside myself with regular pink insulation, white washed Shiplap (painted/cut/nailed up myself), & vinyl floor. I only regret I didn’t get it sooner. Paid each item off as I went & now enjoy having a place not paying rent, tax deductible, & not being in a bad area of town. If it were a home, I’d want it to be 2x as big & go with a mini split. It would absolutely be livable & very comfortable. I would go with an Excalibur shipping Container home also.

  • @verbalasswhoopin
    @verbalasswhoopin Год назад +72

    I have a 20 ft container home and a 120 sq ft tiny house/shed...paid cash for both and debt free...Love it!

    • @sandrajohnson9926
      @sandrajohnson9926 Год назад +10

      Sounds incredible.
      You are better off than many.

    • @verbalasswhoopin
      @verbalasswhoopin Год назад +7

      @@sandrajohnson9926 Absolutely Sandra...sold everything, packed it up, bailed from the city to the countryside and hadn't looked back. Life is good! Stay safe.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад +2

      Container cabins are an interesting idea because theres gloval infrustructure already to move them around, plus they come with big doors you can secure. Have their flaws though.

    • @verbalasswhoopin
      @verbalasswhoopin Год назад +3

      @@TheAnnoyingBoss That's true...I love mine however. Very sound structure, it's diverse, can be carried with you and convertible. Plus it's cheaper than a conventional home lol no payments for 30 years 😉🤗

  • @kevinswinyer3176
    @kevinswinyer3176 Год назад +33

    I am in the process of paying off an older model, 22 foot long fully self contained Class A Motorhome to make into my Tiny home on wheels. It only has 18,000 original miles on the engine, and is equipped with a 4000 Watt Onan generator that only has 79 hours of running time on it. I found it for a steal of $2500.00. It does need a little bit of work and TLC, but I believe I got a decent deal.

    • @CamperVanClark
      @CamperVanClark Год назад +9

      Great deal!

    • @kevinswinyer3176
      @kevinswinyer3176 Год назад +7

      @@CamperVanClark thank you. It needs the roof resealed, and a couple tires, and new belts on the engine. Not sure about the generator yet because I need to get a deep cycle marine battery for a house battery, which is also used to start the generator. As far as inside, the cabinets above the Dinette need to be better secured, as they are currently flopping in the breeze.

    • @kathyfoster7468
      @kathyfoster7468 Год назад +1

      Make sure you build a new roof on it because it will leak period!

    • @kevinswinyer3176
      @kevinswinyer3176 Год назад

      @@kathyfoster7468 I fully intend to reseal the entire roof. It is not, and has not been leaking anywhere inside that I can see, but I still plan on taping all the seams, and around all the fixture housings up on the roof, then I will be resealing the entire roof front to back, side to side.

  • @letsbelogical5537
    @letsbelogical5537 Год назад +26

    Great vid. Built a tiny home on rural land and use it for a hunting cabin. Currently live in a barn-da-minium on the Mother In Laws place. She lives in the main family home across the driveway. She needed some help on her acreage and we needed cheap bills....so we help her out and keep her out of going to assisted living, and she helps us be able to save our money. Its a win for everyone. She gets to retire and enjoy her years for as long as possible on her beautiful property and we have minimal bills! I will admit....she is very amiable and so are we...so it works. May not be the best for high drama family situations...so only proceed with caution, and try to keep seperate living structures as this is more emotional healthy for evwryone.

  • @MynewTennesseeHome
    @MynewTennesseeHome Год назад +47

    I retired to my daughter and SIL's property almost 5 years ago and had a 12×16 high lofted shed/cabin erected. After it was dried in I did the rest. I live 100% off rain water and piggyback a 50A service off their main house. I use propane for cooking and heat but if you plan your windows and doors correctly you don't need air conditioning.

    • @goodcitizen4587
      @goodcitizen4587 Год назад +8

      Consider a ground mount solar array to replace your electric and propane use. True off grid then. 400W panels $250ea; need 20 of them.

    • @goodcitizen4587
      @goodcitizen4587 Год назад +5

      Couple that with mango power 7KWH box that southernprepper1 reviewed 2 weeks ago.

    • @arlissyoung8899
      @arlissyoung8899 Год назад +9

      My new Tennessee Home If you don't live in Florida, you may not need AC. I live in a 16x40 Tiny mansion.

    • @reneenewfrock5743
      @reneenewfrock5743 Год назад +2

      Good for you regarding AC. Acclimatizing is the key but so many aren't willing to do it. Acclimatizing is a military trick for enduring the heat.

    • @tamarap387
      @tamarap387 Год назад +2

      Not sure where you live, but do you find the propane expensive as a heat source? What kind of propane heater? I'll be putting a wood stove in my 12x12....but am a 62 yr old gal so wood might be a bit harder over time.

  • @mollypaintscows
    @mollypaintscows Год назад +27

    In the ‘70s I dated a guy whose dad was a trucker. He and his dad lived in a tiny shed on some farmland. It was perfect for them. His dad was on the road most of the time, so it worked well. The kitchen was a camping cooktop on top of a cabinet. The couch small, it sat right across from the kitchen. The tv was mounted up near the ceiling in a corner. They had a bunk bed behind a divider wall. It was tight, but it worked for them.

    • @mhammer5
      @mhammer5 Год назад +10

      And it did not beat up their paycheck.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад +3

      I think these sheds are affordable enough what i migjt do is get a bigger one for the more long term living and around it ill put smaller ones that are more affordable for when family or friends show up, or sometimes you got a fella thats down on his luck and just needs a gpod bed for a couple months to get back on their feet, or rent them out for really affordable prices to people who dont want 750+ rent. lots of possibilities.

  • @lynnbedford9319
    @lynnbedford9319 Год назад +8

    I'm on Arkwright Town Board Western NY.
    I'm the only one on the board for freedom to put tiny houses on one's property. Others want to code them tax them and regulate renting of rooms in private houses. I'm a real thorn in their side. I'm fighting for the people, not the purse!

    • @GWAYGWAY1
      @GWAYGWAY1 Год назад

      @ Lynn Bedford …..Good for you; the world needs more sensible local government.
      Regards from UK. 🇬🇧

  • @Junkyard_Dog
    @Junkyard_Dog Год назад +35

    You could always put an old trailer frame under it to avoid problems with the county. Simply a storage trailer then.

  • @DDavis-wk1ud
    @DDavis-wk1ud Год назад +62

    Great idea to share with folks. I've lived in various small "cabin" type structures in Alaska. 12x12 and 12x16 are easy to heat. Water catchment, gray water drain, and composting toilet work well to avoid septic and well. I have moved up in life to a semi refer-trailer which is well insulated and up off the ground. A sliding glass door set just inside the factory doors. Picture window where the cooling unit used to be. Life is Peachy

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад +1

      Can you legit use a composting toilet to fertikize a garden without getting E-coli in your tomatos?

  • @fernwehchronicles193
    @fernwehchronicles193 Год назад +3

    I bought one of these cabins, and I live in it in the woods.
    You mention to get rid of the loft on one end and put it in bathroom … I believe that the problem with that is that loft is actually structural on grambel sheds. I did take out the loft on one end, and did so to make room for the wood-burning fireplace … put back in a support higher up on the gambrel.
    The other problem is that the other loft which most people would use as a bedroom may not be an able to bear weight . I tried to find out how much weight but it’s per square foot, and I haven’t taken the time to sit down and calculate.
    Another problem is I cannot afford to have a root cellar built and there is no place for food preps. It goes hot here in the summer and cold winters.
    While the wood-burning stove does keep me warm in the winter, it does not warm the bottom 12 inches of the cabin floor. For example, this winter it was -35°F and water that had spilled on my floor froze overnight. I do also have a vented propane heater and other backup heat sources but the floor is not insulated and I am just going to have to live with that.
    Split mini AC was $600 ppd on Amazon and it is self install and five stars - I can run it day and night on my 1200w solar.
    I love living off grid - I have had a huge house and never want to go back. HOWEVER, I am not a labor skilled woman and this life can be very difficult. There are things you would never think of: black widow and recluse spiders, mosquitos, bugs, bugs, bugs, copper head snakes, 5’ black snakes, coyotes, bears 🐻, hawks and raccoons kill the chickens, chickens love to turn garden beds into dirt baths, Japanese beetles eat fruit trees and stuff in the garden … wells have become VERY expensive to put in … no garbage service …
    Composting toilets are great - but that needs to be lugged through the woods and dumped … and when you get back - prepare to pull ticks off your clothes and body 😢
    I went into living in a shed with rose colored glasses - it is not cheap and takes a lot of patience and time.
    Still, after over three years I am still putting out money for basic stuff like pea gravel over the ankle twisting 2”-3” gravel so it’s not a mud pit in front of shed and an out door container to house garden and sprouting equipment and cattle panels (as fencing) to go around garden … etc …
    Not trying to dissuade anyone - rather want to say go into it eyes wide open. I live in a county with zero regulations and I see a lot of families come and thrive, and a lot also come here and fail at living off grid.

  • @mavisspillman1407
    @mavisspillman1407 Год назад +6

    NO SHAME IN THAT!! I've lived in mine 5yrs now $ paid 24,000.00 my son put in the utility. I've been Dept free for 2 yrs now! Paid it out. Per month. I got a Yellow 💛 40x12 cute little porch! I live on family land

  • @pioneerprepper2048
    @pioneerprepper2048 Год назад +28

    We are currently doing this and while it's difficult it's very very worth it

  • @richmonk508
    @richmonk508 Год назад +9

    With a small space it is a great idea to put a "Murphy" bed in that can be put onto the wall when not in use.

    • @kathymc234
      @kathymc234 Год назад +1

      I think Murphy beds are under used in tiny house living.

    • @dottiewilson-ray4242
      @dottiewilson-ray4242 Год назад

      Yes I’ve been thinking the same thing thanks for confirmation!

  • @lindascudder5341
    @lindascudder5341 Год назад +8

    Ive been talkin about tiny house living for over a week..n now you are giving us info..its almost like i was being listen to.

  • @TUKByV
    @TUKByV Год назад +28

    I was homeless for a year. This would have been a tremendous step up from the minivan I had.

  • @PalmettoParatrooper
    @PalmettoParatrooper Год назад +26

    Rock wool is a little more expensive than fiberglass insulation but it's far superior and the cost difference isn't a big deal when you're only insulating a tiny home.

  • @tacticalmattfoley
    @tacticalmattfoley Год назад +6

    Bubbles from Trailer Park Boys did this years ago..LOL. This will be the new Hooverville.

  • @KO4FFB
    @KO4FFB Год назад +10

    iv been living in a 12x24 for 3 years by choice its been great and i don't see my self ever going back to a conventional home

  • @TrashPanda71
    @TrashPanda71 Год назад +10

    12x16 Tuff Shed for the past year, just finished a 12x8 front porch.
    Wood heater, solar, insulated, have it on the back of some families property with hand pump well and garden, chickens out in the country.
    Sister has the green thumb and nurses degree, i have the defensive hardware. Best we can do here.

  • @teresabuchanan6836
    @teresabuchanan6836 Год назад +12

    Thanks Dave. I love the idea of hiding the doors and windows with the garage door!!!

    • @mj-hk6iv
      @mj-hk6iv Год назад +2

      I knew someone with a machine she'd they did the same thing too. Just pulled the metal doors closed, and the place was secure.

    • @noonierune6933
      @noonierune6933 Год назад +1

      Never thought about the garage door idea

  • @ian5780
    @ian5780 Год назад +7

    Brand new apartment building here in California is charging 3200 a month for a 2 1 apartment. We were a small town 2 decades ago. We still aren't a big city. People who are living in those will not be able to afford it through bad times at all.

    • @sandrajohnson9926
      @sandrajohnson9926 Год назад +2

      I bet the illegal border jumpers will get them.
      Thanks Joe Biden.

  • @blueridgeoffgrid
    @blueridgeoffgrid Год назад +33

    We purchased "unrestricted land" and had our 12x32 tiny home built 16 inches on center. (Like a house) totally debt free. Love this lifestyle. Make sure you plan !

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад +1

      Tell me about how yoy did your water situation. Did you get land ontop of an aquafir or do you have it hauled in..

    • @blueridgeoffgrid
      @blueridgeoffgrid Год назад +2

      @TheAnnoyingBoss we have rain water catchment and indoor plumbing from that using a shurflow 12V Pump. We also have a spring - with a ram pump.

  • @rebasmom4575
    @rebasmom4575 Год назад +44

    This is exactly what we were thinking of doing. We know people that would definitely benefit from having something like this to live in. Everyone is going to need a little help along the way.

  • @jimgraves6464
    @jimgraves6464 Год назад +6

    Dave is a man of God.
    God is speaking through Dave. God is saying times ahead will change for the better. Must walk through the fire to see the light.
    Keep up the ideas Dave.

  • @billywalker9223
    @billywalker9223 Год назад +26

    Tiny homes from sheds are a great idea. I've always been cash poor, but resource rich, so I can't buy one. I'm building four log outbuildings next to the garden, averaging 12'x16'. Gathered stone, cut yellow pine logs, and splitting white oak shakes for their roofs. Hand hewing the logs with a double bit axe and a broad axe. I'm using my brother's band mill to saw flooring and roof sheathing. Throw in some reclaimed wavy glass windows, making the doors, and making hinges and latches at my forge. Picked up some busted bags of mortar and concrete for $1 a bag at Lowes. I'll use a few pounds of nails, which I bought at a closing hardware store, with 450 pounds costing me $36. Each building will cost me $6. Where there's a will, there's a way. Some of the local timberframe guild guys are dropping by to help me with the heavy parts.

    • @juliabrown5948
      @juliabrown5948 Год назад +4

      Wow just wow. Great job, so impressed. This is what will help us survive what's coming, knowing how to do stuff and working together. Good for you!

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад +3

      Bible says in labor there is profit.

  • @Hankandrex
    @Hankandrex Год назад +33

    My husband and I built a 10*12 shed in our backyard. We hired someone to build the shell and we finished it ourselves with insulation, drywall, electric and flooring. We spent $5k total (including a small window AC unit). We use it as my husbands home office now but we always talk about how we could use it temporarily if we lose power. It wouldn't be a long term comfortable solution for our family of 4 (2 adults, 2 small children) and dog, but it would be easier to heat/cool that space and would be an ok short term solution for no power. We have had it for more than 2 years now and are pretty happy with the investment.

    • @MTNurse
      @MTNurse Год назад +2

      Hank and Rex That is such a low price. Would you mind telling me what state you live in? I live in Montana and a shed shell costs so much more than that for that size. Thanks

    • @pjnewton1014
      @pjnewton1014 Год назад +5

      @@MTNurse we live in Houston TX. The guy we hired charged $3100 to build it - materials and labor. It's a 10*12 barn shed with 6 ft side walls (probably 10-12ft in the middle of the shed), heavy duty floor with extra support. It has 2 small windows and a vent in the ceiling. They built the thing from start to finish in about 7 hours, 2 guys. Amazing!! Then my husband finished it out. We did have a friend help us hang some dry wall and in exchange I helped them with some paperwork they needed to get done (I'm an attorney by trade). The name of the company we hired is called Texas Affordable Sheds. Google around for someone local, not a big company.

    • @BornAgain717
      @BornAgain717 Год назад +5

      You definitely come out way better if you build it yourself they charge an arm and leg for what your really getting!

    • @pjnewton1014
      @pjnewton1014 Год назад +3

      @@MTNurse I forgot to mention that there was an existing electrical wire already ran out there when we moved in so it was pretty easy to thread that through and install some pot lights and outlets. That probably helped us a lot with cost too.

    • @MTNurse
      @MTNurse Год назад +2

      @@pjnewton1014 Thank you for all that info. You said your husband finished it. What all did he have to do? Was it just detail work to make it look nicer or things that were necessary? Thank you again

  • @kelleclark
    @kelleclark Год назад +17

    All that chemically soaked particle board would make me deathly ill :( Definitely something to think about for the chemically sensitive. Remember those cheap FEMA trailers...made many folks sick!

  • @Soli_Deo_Gloria_.
    @Soli_Deo_Gloria_. Год назад +22

    Very nice of you Dave to give people another way to approach their circumstances. God bless brother

  • @JackTheRabbitMusic
    @JackTheRabbitMusic Год назад +16

    Been looking into this for about a year. When the owner of my building buys me out to renovate, I will be moving into my own little home on a property I will own outright.
    Great to hear different ideas.

  • @LierinEdana
    @LierinEdana Год назад +5

    There is a lot of land that is unincorporated, not subject to any codes at all, and zoned permanently off grid. It is also considerably cheaper than developed land or property being sold for residential building. Dig a well, buy The Humanure Handbook and build an enclosed composting toilet, and buy some solar panels. Then get one or more of the sheds (if you have a road in that will handle the width, most of the companies making them will deliver just about anywhere. Do your homework on the land and on your floor plans!! If you get a 16 wide x 24 or 32 with a loft, you have ample room for a loft bedroom for the kids, and a bedroom/bath directly in under it for the adults. Lay out your bathroom along a long side, 4 feet wide and the same length as your bedroom/the loft, and you have the remaining space to add a kitchen/dining/living area. You can use a composting toilet that you build inside with zero odor or mess btw, and an indoor shower is a blessing in the winter. Jus' sayin'.
    Add wiring and plumbing (if you are digging a shallow well, or have a spring, try to place the shed so that you can pump water directly into the shed, or from inside it ... again, winter!). Insulate it and add whatever wall type you prefer. Finish the floor. Now, you have a place to live. If you are bringing water in, extend your roof enough to provide cover for your 250 gallon totes. Less sun means less algae in the summer, and less snow to clear in the winter. Then, add a covered porch large enough that you can use tools and build/work on other projects without getting rained on ~ or just to extend the living space ~ or both.
    Whatever floor plans you come up with use masking or duct tape to lay out the shed size, your walls, and what furniture you plan to have before you EVER purchase/rent the shed! What looks great on paper often doesn't work at all in real life but most of the things you might have to change will be evident with just the tape outline to walk around and get a feel for the actual size and things that might have to be reworked, resized, or planned differently. With a well/shallow well/spring (and any filtration you need), a composting toilet, and even minimal solar (if you have wind, consider adding a helix to the panels). Make sure of water rights before you set up to use a stream or river to provide power OR as a water source.
    Speaking from experience here as we've done all of these things. Once we were set, we purchased a second shed and had it set at right angles to the original, built a connecting square room in the corner, and a nice deck that is partially covered between them in the front. That gave us the space to add a nice large bedroom, a full bathroom, and our office/comms in the square room ... plus finish the kitchen/pantry, and have a small living room. We use only wood for heating, and we have a combination two burner rocket stove/grill/earth oven/smoker that we build out of brick and some sheet metal. The smoker will do both warm and cool smoking depending on where we light the fire. This is on our deck under the metal roof with a cement block form under it for support. Our only bills are insurance and phone/internet.
    We bought the land on a rent to own option (google companies because there are several that you can search for property through) and on only a disabled/retired military pay. It took about a year to complete the first shed paying as we built, and another year to finish the second/add the extra room. But, we did this with less than $3000 a month, both of us partially disabled, and at 60ish. The only real issue we have is a medical emergency and the distance/time involved which is something all of us old folks have to consider and weigh the odds on.

    • @LierinEdana
      @LierinEdana Год назад

      @Teresa Martinez This is true ~ but the key word in your post is the word "town". Almost every town in the country has a set of codes. Unrestricted/off-grid land is not in any town. That land comes with no services (water, sewer, power, phone, and often first responder or even an initial address). If you want to live in a town or small community you will find that there are codes and restrictions. Tiny house codes change just about yearly in every state and every county and it is something you have to check as thoroughly as you would a deed and mineral/water rights. Certain states retain some restrictions across the entire state as far as water and septic installation, and mineral rights are generally attached to each individual parcel. Some areas also retain restrictions on RV living. What really bites is finding a piece of land that is perfect in every way except for that one little restriction that is tacked on.
      When choosing unrestricted land, you have to do a lot of homework, and decide for yourself if you really want those services or want to provide them for yourself. The more services you would prefer, the more you are subject to requirements and the codes necessary for companies to maintain them. Only you can decide on what balance between the two you are comfortable with.

  • @AllAmericanPrepper13
    @AllAmericanPrepper13 Год назад +10

    I use a 5-gallon bucket for my toilet and I put a kitty pool in the yard as a bathtub been living this way for 6 years and I love it. Thank you for putting this information out there so other people can actually have a roof over their head.

    • @kathyfoster7468
      @kathyfoster7468 Год назад +2

      And where do u dump this bucket? And how do you bathe in the winter?

  • @OurCrazyGypsyLife
    @OurCrazyGypsyLife Год назад +17

    We live off grid in a 14’x40’ Graceland building on acreage. It is a beautiful home and it’s even insured as a home. It’s possible if it’s done right.

  • @randybrown140
    @randybrown140 Год назад +12

    WARNING: Just on noon news, KANSAS WHEAT HARVEST IS PREDICTED TO BE LOWEST IN 60 YEARS 🤔

    • @Hatbox948
      @Hatbox948 Год назад +5

      Stock up on flour now!

    • @sandrajohnson9926
      @sandrajohnson9926 Год назад +5

      Rice harvests, also.
      I believe in Thailand - from Alaska Prepper.
      Half of the world depends on Rice for food, main staple.
      People are going to starve.

    • @sandrajohnson9926
      @sandrajohnson9926 Год назад +5

      ​@@Hatbox948 Put up 50 pounds in Mylar & vacuum- sealed.
      Another 50 pounds to go.
      Rice, dry beans, & lentils put up.
      Do all you can now.
      God bless.
      The Lord is creator of all the earth.
      His love endures forever.

    • @Hatbox948
      @Hatbox948 Год назад +2

      @@sandrajohnson9926 Yes, I will and am. I do need to get more flour though.

    • @sandrajohnson9926
      @sandrajohnson9926 Год назад +4

      ​@@Hatbox948 I buy Prairie Gold organic at a store in the country. They sell in bulk, rejected vegetables, lots of canned goods, & some expired food. I think they cater to the Amish.
      We live in Southwest Missouri.
      I have yet to get it in mylar or vacuum seal.
      I also bought bulk oats.
      I think it was under $90 for both.

  • @Luvmom8091
    @Luvmom8091 Год назад +8

    Thank you for loving mankind.

    • @TomiAnneTimm
      @TomiAnneTimm Год назад +1

      Don't you mean Thank you for loving free labour mankind?

    • @TUKByV
      @TUKByV Год назад

      ​@@TomiAnneTimm nonsense.

    • @TomiAnneTimm
      @TomiAnneTimm Год назад

      @@TUKByV The unknown knows nothing, God says, Hear this, O ye that swallow up the needy, even to make the poor of the land to fail, Saying, ...That we may buy the poor for silver, and the needy for a pair of shoes; yeah, and sell the refuse of the wheat...When will you search God's scriptures?

    • @TUKByV
      @TUKByV Год назад

      @@TomiAnneTimm Look! A socialist hiding behind Scripture! Thanks for ushering in the next Holodomor.

    • @TUKByV
      @TUKByV Год назад

      @@TomiAnneTimm by the way, "The Unknown Knows" is just an old song. Do you have any meaningful taunts to offer?

  • @knothead35
    @knothead35 Год назад +5

    I know a couple who lived in a converted shed at a lakehouse area. Land was given to them by parents. They had no running water or electricity. Used a bucket for the bathroom in the middle of the night..took the golfcart to the public restroom/restaurant during daylight hours. Far as i know. It wasn't avainst the rules to not have electricity. This was in eastern NC. If it was, no one ever said anything. They were just there on weekends mainly, although they stayed a week every now and then. People should be able to camp on their land, regardless of what the dwelling looks like. Especially if you're not in the suburbs where there are HOAs

  • @gregrobertson9957
    @gregrobertson9957 Год назад +6

    Off-gas that sucker a season or two before moving in, seal it up good on inside but air it out often.

  • @wiseowl-re7bs
    @wiseowl-re7bs Год назад +33

    Its a great idea and we put one on our land and fixed it up as a guest house. It also doubles as my freeze dryer station and will be ready for use if times are hard for friends or family. Since they are small u can pick up seconds, extras and left over construction material and do it cheaply but end result is like new fabulous

    • @sandrajohnson9926
      @sandrajohnson9926 Год назад +9

      We live a gravel road & are seeing more families putting sheds on it for family members. A house or trailer was already there, electric, well, etc.
      People will go back to multigenerational living together. It's cheaper, & better for all.

  • @sueliles8847
    @sueliles8847 Год назад +2

    80 yrs old and have been wanting this for years. Thanks!!

  • @nursekate6772
    @nursekate6772 Год назад +9

    I've been trying for YEARS to get my husband to get a small plot of land off the beaten path to put one of these as a secondary location. We had one years ago, parked on a small plot of land in the woods. We used an outhouse, some solar, it had a well and septic. We insulated, put in an off grid kitchen and it was WONDERFUL. Unfortunately the area was horrible for game (in the middle of a pine forest), impossible to grown any decent amount of food. So last year he sold it to a family member. I've been trying since then to convince him to get another set up like we had.

    • @sweetnspiceyone
      @sweetnspiceyone Год назад

      FYI I would not eat the big wild 4-legged game. Either Gates or the other one who owns FB have a company and they have been giving arm candy to all the Deer!

  • @wildandliving
    @wildandliving Год назад +2

    Sheds don't always meet code in your area. Shed conversions are a bad idea for most people. You build a foundation nkt hard run plumbing lines not hard just have to dig and plan ahead before foundation. You frame a wall and attach it to a foundation you build a roof and then finish the plumbing and electrical you put walls up and put in cabinets ect. You do 2x6 on 16 inch centers to fit the insulation. For outside you wrap the plywood and use plastic on the I side it needs to breath so you add a vent strip. Windows just a square box to nail on. It's simple just physically demanding work

  • @RenegadeAcre
    @RenegadeAcre Год назад +8

    Nice! I typically just lurk without commenting but this topic is way too far up my alley to stay silent. Many of you know why. 😁 thanks Dave!

  • @VegaChastain
    @VegaChastain Год назад +5

    Remember too spray in insulation will give you better bang for your buck with 2x4 construction. Thanks Dave.

    • @kathymc234
      @kathymc234 Год назад

      Spray in insulation or of outdoors and make some homes unlivable.

  • @reidcrosby6241
    @reidcrosby6241 Год назад +2

    Excellent vid. We have drug TONS of sheds home from local suburbanites. Brace them up and drag them home on skids. FYI i have had EXCELLENT luck putting used rubber roofing under them to prevent moisture movement from the ground.

  • @Loraann54fi10
    @Loraann54fi10 Год назад +13

    Home Depot has one that's two story. If my house wasn't paid for that is exactly what I would do. I think they are absolutely adorable. They remind me of a fairy tail cottage. You could even put one over a little root cellar.

    • @kelleclark
      @kelleclark Год назад +2

      Overpriced and VERY cheaply built...go inside and really check out the construction.

    • @Loraann54fi10
      @Loraann54fi10 Год назад

      @@kelleclark I have been in it. Yes it would all have to be perfected but not difficult or too expensive. Well, I suppose it would be expensive these days.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад +2

      I stay away from thr major retail chains and I go with the local guys who really hussle building a more quality product. Im nit a fan of the amish peoples religion but they are in my area and they are good craftsman. They built my families shed and poarch swing and theyre very well done and competitive prices. Plus its easier to have them build upgrades for a little extra cost and if you go with home depot they just want to sell it to you and be done

    • @Loraann54fi10
      @Loraann54fi10 Год назад +1

      @@TheAnnoyingBoss yes, I agree with you. We do it all ourselves too. I actually have a huge load of sawmill wood that is waiting for it's new life as a shed. Got the wood at $1 a board foot. Someone ordered it from a local sawmill. They paid half and never showed up to collect it and paid his bill. The only reason we hire anyone for anything is major electrical work and even that is done by a close friend.

  • @cameroncunningham204
    @cameroncunningham204 Год назад +5

    I have 5.0 Acres I bought a few years ago and I've been slowly building the infrastructure I need (utilities, housing, gardens, etc) Its imperative that you have an alternative to city living

  • @kimskluckers5665
    @kimskluckers5665 Год назад +6

    I converted a 12x24 shed with a porch and two lofts. Lived in there with two teenage boys and two Labs. Amazing how comfortable it was and how little needed to live on. 🥰

  • @tundranomad
    @tundranomad Год назад +6

    Awesome video. For people who don't know, going with a 2x6 construction is probably going to increase cost by 20% or so. But much better for insulation, which is helpful in the long term.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      Im wondering what is best if i want to bulletproof my walls. Maybe i give up with wood and switch to maybe a metal frame to gome the weight but im also worried about turning my micro seasonal home into a lightning rod that kills me

  • @markjohnson5276
    @markjohnson5276 Год назад +8

    In the 1930s my mothers family of six spent a winter in Minnesota living in a chicken coup about the size of these sheds. In the winter, in Minnesota. OK roll tape. This causes me to recollect that all the horror stories of survival during that time were about a year and a half of length. After that life settled down to just miserable for about a decade and a half. We haven't started yet.

  • @billparks7368
    @billparks7368 Год назад +5

    Tried to get the wife to do this 10 years ago.
    No sale! Lol
    So easy to do. Just have to be willing to live a minimalist lifestyle. 🤷

  • @joanmerriken9216
    @joanmerriken9216 Год назад +1

    Dave, I can see this working for families who have land that other other family members can have use of a well, septic, etc. Having a stranger come into help you with work in exchange for free rent. No. I’ve seen it before. They work a little while and then you have to fight to get them to do anything. And…try and kick them mout? They can destroy the structure just to pay you back. A great idea when we had people who were grateful for help. Today we’re dealing with drug abuse etc.

  • @shadowdancer1358
    @shadowdancer1358 Год назад +4

    A Murphy bed makes sense to me if I had to live in one of these.
    Sky lights for the garage door shed with no windows so you don’t get depressed with no light.

  • @daves1563
    @daves1563 Год назад +5

    I would build my own and put a greenhouse leaned off it. Then I would use the greenhouse heat to heat the house after insulated. I’d just use Hammocks to sleep. It’s crazy that a tiny house is the new American dream. I’m happy with a tarp and hammock and a view though.

    • @WarriorGnome
      @WarriorGnome Год назад

      Humidity and mold maybe an issue
      Air circulation is key.

  • @lyngruen8607
    @lyngruen8607 Год назад +2

    Oh how I wish 😢🙏🙏🙏
    Stay well and be safe 🙏 ❤️
    Texas Nana 🤠
    Psalm 91

  • @michiganpreparedness
    @michiganpreparedness Год назад +4

    The Amish make great sheds at very reasonable prices... seeb some great build quality units in northern Michigan..upto 16" x 40" with loft and was spray Insulated... would keep you really toasty with a small wood stove...

  • @carrascotech
    @carrascotech Год назад +11

    Thank you @Southernprepper1 for all of these useful tips.
    I really like these tiny houses.
    Another great tip from you was to test how you would get water from the source to your location. I learned real quick how heavy water is. Now I’ve got buckets and a kids red wagon in my preps.

  • @SgtSkrog
    @SgtSkrog Год назад +11

    That's the plan for 10 acres. Several of them. So looking forward to it. Permits are the key. As long as under 200sq ft. where I am at I am ok without too much hassle. Keep it looking like storage where possible for less hassle. I have neighbors nearby who would potentially rat me out so another area of concern. Try to stay smart with the sewer so you do not kill yourself or ruin your well. Hardest part is downsizing and getting rid of "crap". But well worth it. My location even has problems with rain collection. I will ignore that stupid law. There is common sense and then there is over reach. Earth bag homes in some location another option, I may do both.

    • @dave-yeahthatsme3925
      @dave-yeahthatsme3925 Год назад +1

      what state ?

    • @SgtSkrog
      @SgtSkrog Год назад +2

      @@dave-yeahthatsme3925 Nevada, a very interesting state. County to county some pretty interesting differences.

  • @PeaceJourney...
    @PeaceJourney... Год назад +9

    To me, a tiny house skoolie was the answer. I am an assistant to a person with property to park it on and finish my build as part of my wages. I also have a rent free loft I live in while working, a small car for my use, utilities and groceries paid for in addition to a weekly payday. On off time, I take the skoolie and go camping in state parks. I have only 2 bills, my phone and insurance 🙃

  • @limak9434
    @limak9434 Год назад +5

    I wouldnt mind having several of them inside a bigger prefabricated metal building. Indoor greenhouse, everyone in the family has their own, one for weapons.

    • @gailoreilly1516
      @gailoreilly1516 Год назад +2

      I was thinking the same thing when I had the idea of moving to Alaska. Park a decent camper inside a metal building. Sky lights in metal building, place to stack wood out of the snow.. i have changed my mind, just too old .

    • @TUKByV
      @TUKByV Год назад +1

      I may put up a steel kit building and build a sort of apartment in part of it.

  • @FernWillis
    @FernWillis Год назад +3

    My mother lived in a boxcar when she was young. My grandpa worked for the railroad.

  • @hollymorhart6990
    @hollymorhart6990 Год назад +4

    I definitely want more land and less house now. 🙂
    ❤️🙏🏼✝️🙌🏼🎉❤️❤️❤️

  • @lyndabell1966
    @lyndabell1966 Год назад +2

    Im in 10x14 in my mother's backyard. Im going to have to find a person with land willing to let me bring my tiny house to, when she passes or goes into elderly home. I can see the vision of tiny home communities for older people like myself helping each other. My alternative is to live in a car😢. I'm on disability and there is no affordable housing in safe place for kind quiet older persons.

  • @crisdlcruz145
    @crisdlcruz145 Год назад +6

    I used to rent a small cabin behind a house the fireplace hadnt been inspected so no heat only a small infrared heater that read 32°inside and would read 53° when left running
    It wasnt bad i could handle it my proper rest was worth it

  • @Sparkysings2
    @Sparkysings2 Год назад +11

    I’ve been wanting some sort of tiny home rather it be a dome, a container home, a tiny home or a shed to home. It’s just me and my dog. But yes you still have to afford at least a lot and have utilities. I would love to have an arrangement with someone in exchange for some help. But being a single disabled person is almost impossible to find housing, which is why I’m renting a friends basement.

    • @debbieluna2967
      @debbieluna2967 Год назад +2

      I'm a single senior female and if I can do it you can 👍

    • @sandrajohnson9926
      @sandrajohnson9926 Год назад

      ​@@debbieluna2967 Nice!

    • @Sparkysings2
      @Sparkysings2 Год назад +2

      @@debbieluna2967 takes money I don’t have.

    • @debbieluna2967
      @debbieluna2967 Год назад +4

      @@Sparkysings2 doesn't take as much as paying someone rent. And places like marketplace and yard sales become your go toos. It can be done. May take time but it can be done. Mines is 3 years in the making as I am on limited income and disabled to boot. So if you say it can't be done as long as you think that way it won't get done.

    • @Sparkysings2
      @Sparkysings2 Год назад

      @@debbieluna2967 that’s not what I was saying but thanks

  • @chancepaladin
    @chancepaladin Год назад +7

    exactly 100%, I'm going to try to accumulate as many sheds as I can, once I get land for exactly this reason.

  • @JNoMooreNumbers
    @JNoMooreNumbers Год назад +6

    Gotta be sneaky with that unless it's unrestricted now . If I had a spot on a farm I know, could handle that. Maybe connect 2 of them.

  • @bearcreekgirl6967
    @bearcreekgirl6967 Год назад +7

    I want the yellow one so I can sit on the porch and read my bible and watch my garden grow. I would need an extra on for storage of all my canning, etc.

  • @TheEGA4421
    @TheEGA4421 Год назад +3

    Great information Dave. Sheds have come a long way. I remembered when sheds were primarily used for garden tools and such.
    Regarding the second shed: the toilet, one can have a compost toilet and a standing sink. More room for a shower and additional storage space. I live in Arizona and many people are buying land and putting modular homes (regulations) on them. I have been seeing an increase in 18-wheelers on the I-10 hauling modular homes. This is a win-win for both parties. People have a choice of housing and where to live and businesses are hiring more people to do such work.

  • @longdogt6724
    @longdogt6724 Год назад +14

    I don’t work for them, but someone considering this might want to take a look at Incredible Tiny Homes. They build tiny homes at quite reasonable prices, and also have property in Tennessee and I believe South Carolina where you can rent a spot with electric and sewer for a reasonable price. They can also make their homes totally off grid for about $5000 more. It could be worth looking into.

    • @TheTerriwebb
      @TheTerriwebb Год назад +2

      I've seen their homes and they are very nice and extremely reasonable. I think the owner used to be homeless and being a carpenter he built himself a tiny home. Now he wants everyone to be able to afford their own home.

    • @cindylong624
      @cindylong624 Год назад

      you have to 'buy in' on their property for 5k then its 200 to 300 a month. The SC property has'nt been cleared off

  • @jacobfarley2332
    @jacobfarley2332 Год назад +4

    Depending on your land, you can also use the tiny houses as an extra source of income for a farm, doing agri tourism and renting out the tiny house to visitors for the weekend as an easy getaway to the countryside, or to rent if you wanted to teach classes on homesteading or farming.

  • @susananderson1071
    @susananderson1071 Год назад +7

    Rather than septic, put an incinerator or composting toilet and French or other drain for the gray water.
    There's composting toilets that separate solids and liquids.
    The overhead door will be noisy.
    Find a way to secure the building, tiny home thefts are going on.

  • @pauldavis6242
    @pauldavis6242 Год назад +3

    Problem with lofts on both ends circulating AC & HEAT. I bought one 4 yrs. ago. 12×28. Single & paid for!

    • @cindylong624
      @cindylong624 Год назад +1

      you could have a wire panel in the loft floor to allow the circulation of the heat ands cool air

  • @stephaniewillson9383
    @stephaniewillson9383 Год назад +1

    Living in a 14x40 Graceland...its perfect!!
    Could not buy insulation last year so wrapped it in reflectix...holds temp very well.
    On the standing AC, had a free standing, and they produce heat also...get 3x3 windows for window units.

  • @sandrajohnson9926
    @sandrajohnson9926 Год назад +7

    I watch alot of Living Big in a Tiny Home --- Great ideas.
    Very creative spaces, ideas for storage & lay out. Some have bedrooms downstairs.
    The first tiny home show I watched had bed that pulls out from under floor. On top part of floor was a desk & chair. Or use a big couch that folds out.
    That's the biggest problem I found with tiny homes. I do not do stairs or ladders.
    You need to think like a RV person.
    Compact living.
    Eliminate all the things you don't need.
    Downsize clothes.
    Dishes - minimum.
    We all need to get rid of more stuff.

  • @connielipp8648
    @connielipp8648 Год назад +4

    What excellent ideas! I pray this brings great hope to many.. And creative ideas..

  • @deborahelburn4720
    @deborahelburn4720 Год назад +2

    Have 3. First one custom with 8' walls. Second one repo and a deal. Third one, a repo also, with front porch will screen in.
    Back loft is lower than front.
    I like closer to ground at my age. Less steps.
    The one you like the best Dave, with add on, we did outdoor kitchen and shower area. Curtins slide back/forward.
    Checked zoning & if under a certain sq footage no permits needed, thus outdoor shower/kitchen.
    Smaller one even had tiny wood stove.

  • @jackdcharlton1
    @jackdcharlton1 Год назад +1

    We did a 42 x 16 Hickory Shed. Put the kitchen sink, on otherside of bathroom (toilet/sink/jetted tub, so when bringing in water, much less plumbing. At both far ends....bedroom on one, living room kitchen on other, bathroom in-between.
    Full Size appliances, woodstove. R13 works in sub zero with tongue and groove on floor/ceiling/walls.
    Buy seconds from lumber mill direct for thirty cents on the dollar. I was able to get slate for kitchen floor, woodstove going to Habitat for Humanity (like a Goodwill, but less expensive) also go to construction sites and buy leftover materials from contractors (often if they understand what your trying to accomplish, free.
    Built cabinets from scrap tongue and groove. Wiring was my biggest cost for materials and insulation, but did 100% of labor....thank you RUclips for all the free how to DIY

  • @3adscout826
    @3adscout826 Год назад +11

    Dave, I have heard several folks on RUclips who live in “tiny homes” say that they “built” their home on wheels so it is considered a Mobile home or camper and they get around the permitting

  • @ModestNeophyte
    @ModestNeophyte Год назад +2

    I'm lucky to have always been confident about my living situation, but I've always dreamed of living in about a 12x36 or 12x48 shed like that. I don't think i could live totally tiny but a larger shed would be great.

  • @RL-RL
    @RL-RL Год назад +4

    With the right colors, and proper placements, they make great BOL's.

  • @chirogirl67550
    @chirogirl67550 Год назад +1

    Weird, since the time I moved into our home 10 years ago, I had a reoccurring visions of several little homes on my 2 acres…. So I’m not the only one thinking that.

  • @eileensimpson3725
    @eileensimpson3725 Год назад +4

    We bought one of these and made it into a home. I had to sell and move but they work so well.

  • @Van_Liberty
    @Van_Liberty Год назад +1

    I have a dry flush LAVEO toilet in my new Class B Ford Transit 350 HD motor home and it would be an excellent choice for a small home like in this video. It's no more than a fancy bucket. It uses cartridges, but can work with the right size trash bin bags. Perfect for off grid life.

  • @jaysbaby2012
    @jaysbaby2012 Год назад +6

    Fantastic Idea Dave, thank you.

    • @peace-and-quiet
      @peace-and-quiet Год назад +2

      ​@@bigchief4044 Yeah, you laugh now 😳

    • @NoneyaTexasontheback20
      @NoneyaTexasontheback20 Год назад +1

      If you can afford a bunker you ain’t living in tiny home….

    • @jaysbaby2012
      @jaysbaby2012 Год назад +1

      @@NoneyaTexasontheback20 Yeah, you are correct, it wasn't such a great idea after all.

    • @NoneyaTexasontheback20
      @NoneyaTexasontheback20 Год назад +1

      @@jaysbaby2012 😂. 👍 I got all the above and then some…. With the right bunker you don’t even need a house

    • @TUKByV
      @TUKByV Год назад +1

      ​@@NoneyaTexasontheback20 Riiiiiiiight.

  • @neverettebrakensiek8771
    @neverettebrakensiek8771 Год назад +1

    When we bought our property the first thing we did was build one of these from scratch to have a place to sleep while we developed our property. I believe its 10 x 12 but we built a 3 tier staggerd bunk bed in it, small fridge, microwave , heat and air. Its been way better than sleeping in tents as we build our home. Once we are done with our home this little bunk house can be modified for a full time resident or for guest

  • @madamedubonnet92
    @madamedubonnet92 Год назад +1

    We try last year in North East Tennessee. NO LUCK for us. 2 different County . Regulations, regulations harassment, WE FINALLY GIVE UP...😢 Good luck with and you will be successful ❤

  • @frodrickfronkensteen9241
    @frodrickfronkensteen9241 Год назад +1

    David... this does help! ------ Ben following/watching you since 09'. THANK YOU !!!
    My only additions...
    The first structure... I'd put (leave room for) a SMALL wood burning stove right inside the door (to the right)
    Any lofts included... LEAVE THEM in place. Teens/kids will do JUST FINE in such spaces. Else... storage.
    If you're trying to plan for a bathroom... folks can duck their heads to answer the call.
    For those capable/willing... do your research... these prefab'd sheds are great... but IF you have the tools and knowledge... you can (RIGHT NOW) plan/purchase/build on your own for substantially less.
    Love you David. Keep educating the next generation.

  • @barbaragibson9007
    @barbaragibson9007 Год назад +1

    This is a great idea. I'm concerned that I'll have some kids and grandkids living with us again as times get more difficult. Even a small house would be so helpful. It would allow for privacy and personal space. We're all going to have to think outside of the box. I've seen some great sheds at the Amish store we visit periodically. They have some great options.

  • @erolkavlakverizon6112
    @erolkavlakverizon6112 Год назад +3

    Dave, the first building you went into is what my friend just purchased..I put the electrical in where he wanted it. He wants to use it as a woodworking shop. We put a 100 Amp box in it. All wired in and powered up. One day. He will insulate it and install a wall AC unit in the back wall. Personally. I could live in that, not a problem. Add water and hook into the existing septic. And we are in business.

  • @matthewvalentine3549
    @matthewvalentine3549 Год назад +1

    Love this idea. Glad you covered it. Don't forget to get your permit if needed so they can't take it.

  • @d.l.hemmingway3758
    @d.l.hemmingway3758 Год назад +3

    David thanks for this. I have been looking at these. Backyard Portable Buildings has several different prefabricated cabins. They will even set them up for 750 watts electrical.