Discussion:
Coming to an in-fill lot near you soon
(too old to reply)
~ Paul Berg ~
2007-07-30 15:53:37 UTC
Permalink
~
From KATU News (Portland, Oregon)

Olmpia, Washington -- Talk about down-sizing! One woman is living in a
house that you really have to see to believe.

"It's 84 square feet, so roughly the size of a parking spot. Actually,
smaller than a parking spot," says Dee Williams, who decided it was time
to move. She was living in a 1,500-square foot home in Portland, but
decided the house wasn't small enough - yes, small enough!

Dee built the tiny cabin herself out of salvaged material. She picked
the door out of a dumpster and retrieved the floors from a house fire.
Dee's new tiny home sits in her friend's backyard.

"In exchange, I do work on their house," she says.

It takes Dee five steps, sometimes four, to get from one end of her
house to the other.

"Two steps through the kitchen and you're in my living room. Two steps
into the living room, you bang into the wall," Dee says, laughing.

Two solar panels provide electricity. A tiny propane tank allows Dee to
cook in her $10,000 home on wheels. Do her friends think the 44-year-old
hazardous waste inspector is crazy?

"My friends definitely thought, well, they had some questions for me!"
she says.

The obvious question: Why?

The simple answer:

"A simpler life, time, more money. I don't have a mortgage. I don't have
a big utility bill," Dee says.

Her monthly heating bill in the winter is $6, less in the summer.

"I'm able to offer money to my family if they need it, (and to) my
friends if they need it," says Dee.

To get to her bedroom, she walks up a step ladder to her loft.

"Every night I look at the stars and watch it rain over and over again.
So this is it. Not much to it," says Dee.

And that's the point. Not much to it. Simple. Small. A dream house
tinier than a parking spot.

"Right now there's nowhere else I want to be!"

(End of News Article)
~

Poster's Note: I can just hear the urban planners now: "How small can
we go on those in-fill lots?"

~
Don Homuth
2007-07-30 16:35:11 UTC
Permalink
Post by ~ Paul Berg ~
~
From KATU News (Portland, Oregon)
Olmpia, Washington -- Talk about down-sizing! One woman is living in a
house that you really have to see to believe.
"It's 84 square feet, so roughly the size of a parking spot. Actually,
smaller than a parking spot," says Dee Williams, who decided it was time
to move. She was living in a 1,500-square foot home in Portland, but
decided the house wasn't small enough - yes, small enough!
If that's what folks choose to do, why not?

Up the hills several ridges from me, there are several 8,000 to 10,000
sq ft McMansions with two people living in them.
lein
2007-07-30 16:47:20 UTC
Permalink
Post by Don Homuth
Post by ~ Paul Berg ~
~
From KATU News (Portland, Oregon)
Olmpia, Washington -- Talk about down-sizing! One woman is living in a
house that you really have to see to believe.
"It's 84 square feet, so roughly the size of a parking spot. Actually,
smaller than a parking spot," says Dee Williams, who decided it was time
to move. She was living in a 1,500-square foot home in Portland, but
decided the house wasn't small enough - yes, small enough!
If that's what folks choose to do, why not?
Up the hills several ridges from me, there are several 8,000 to 10,000
sq ft McMansions with two people living in them.
Many would say two people living in a house the size of yours is
excessive.
Don Homuth
2007-07-30 16:52:52 UTC
Permalink
Post by lein
Post by Don Homuth
Post by ~ Paul Berg ~
~
From KATU News (Portland, Oregon)
Olmpia, Washington -- Talk about down-sizing! One woman is living in a
house that you really have to see to believe.
"It's 84 square feet, so roughly the size of a parking spot. Actually,
smaller than a parking spot," says Dee Williams, who decided it was time
to move. She was living in a 1,500-square foot home in Portland, but
decided the house wasn't small enough - yes, small enough!
If that's what folks choose to do, why not?
Up the hills several ridges from me, there are several 8,000 to 10,000
sq ft McMansions with two people living in them.
Many would say two people living in a house the size of yours is
excessive.
Some would. Many would not. You might, but only for rhetorical
effect.
Mr. Berg
2007-07-30 18:52:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by Don Homuth
Post by ~ Paul Berg ~
~
From KATU News (Portland, Oregon)
Olmpia, Washington -- Talk about down-sizing! One woman is living in a
house that you really have to see to believe.
"It's 84 square feet, so roughly the size of a parking spot. Actually,
smaller than a parking spot," says Dee Williams, who decided it was time
to move. She was living in a 1,500-square foot home in Portland, but
decided the house wasn't small enough - yes, small enough!
If that's what folks choose to do, why not?
Up the hills several ridges from me, there are several 8,000 to 10,000
sq ft McMansions with two people living in them.
If that's what folks choose to do, why not?

`
George Conklin
2007-07-30 23:56:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by Don Homuth
Post by Don Homuth
Post by ~ Paul Berg ~
~
From KATU News (Portland, Oregon)
Olmpia, Washington -- Talk about down-sizing! One woman is living in a
house that you really have to see to believe.
"It's 84 square feet, so roughly the size of a parking spot. Actually,
smaller than a parking spot," says Dee Williams, who decided it was time
to move. She was living in a 1,500-square foot home in Portland, but
decided the house wasn't small enough - yes, small enough!
If that's what folks choose to do, why not?
Up the hills several ridges from me, there are several 8,000 to 10,000
sq ft McMansions with two people living in them.
If that's what folks choose to do, why not?
`
Some people live in a tent too.
Lobby Dosser
2007-07-31 07:37:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by George Conklin
Post by Don Homuth
Post by Don Homuth
Post by ~ Paul Berg ~
~
From KATU News (Portland, Oregon)
Olmpia, Washington -- Talk about down-sizing! One woman is living
in a house that you really have to see to believe.
"It's 84 square feet, so roughly the size of a parking spot.
Actually, smaller than a parking spot," says Dee Williams, who
decided it was
time
Post by Don Homuth
Post by Don Homuth
Post by ~ Paul Berg ~
to move. She was living in a 1,500-square foot home in Portland,
but decided the house wasn't small enough - yes, small enough!
If that's what folks choose to do, why not?
Up the hills several ridges from me, there are several 8,000 to
10,000 sq ft McMansions with two people living in them.
If that's what folks choose to do, why not?
`
Some people live in a tent too.
Sometimes I live in the country,
Sometimes I live in the town.
Rev. Bob 'Bob' Crispen
2007-07-31 08:40:08 UTC
Permalink
The kindly Rev. overheard Lobby Dosser
Post by Lobby Dosser
Sometimes I live in the country,
Sometimes I live in the town.
Oh, don't tease us, Lobby. You'll never get one of those great
notions.
--
Rev. Bob "Bob" Crispen
revbob at crispen dot org
Ex Cathedra weblog: http://blog.crispen.org/

Scandinavia’s reign of terror was in trouble when people stopped
building thatched roof houses. It was over when somebody invented the
fire extinguisher. - Robert Michael Crispen
Bill Shatzer
2007-07-30 20:10:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by Don Homuth
Post by ~ Paul Berg ~
~
From KATU News (Portland, Oregon)
Olmpia, Washington -- Talk about down-sizing! One woman is living in a
house that you really have to see to believe.
"It's 84 square feet, so roughly the size of a parking spot. Actually,
smaller than a parking spot," says Dee Williams, who decided it was time
to move. She was living in a 1,500-square foot home in Portland, but
decided the house wasn't small enough - yes, small enough!
If that's what folks choose to do, why not?
Up the hills several ridges from me, there are several 8,000 to 10,000
sq ft McMansions with two people living in them.
They must not like each other much.

Peace and justice,
Steven
2007-07-30 21:35:24 UTC
Permalink
This was on KTVB a week and a half ago. No, it never works if you have
a lover. She is a charming woman though.
Paul Johnson
2007-07-31 02:45:24 UTC
Permalink
Post by Steven
This was on KTVB a week and a half ago. No, it never works if you have
a lover. She is a charming woman though.
It what?
http://learn.to/quote/
Don Homuth
2007-07-31 01:23:24 UTC
Permalink
On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 13:10:59 -0700, Bill Shatzer
Post by Bill Shatzer
Post by Don Homuth
Post by ~ Paul Berg ~
~
From KATU News (Portland, Oregon)
Olmpia, Washington -- Talk about down-sizing! One woman is living in a
house that you really have to see to believe.
"It's 84 square feet, so roughly the size of a parking spot. Actually,
smaller than a parking spot," says Dee Williams, who decided it was time
to move. She was living in a 1,500-square foot home in Portland, but
decided the house wasn't small enough - yes, small enough!
If that's what folks choose to do, why not?
Up the hills several ridges from me, there are several 8,000 to 10,000
sq ft McMansions with two people living in them.
They must not like each other much.
Or they communicate by sending notes via the cleaning staff.
Scratch
2007-07-31 01:08:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by Don Homuth
If that's what folks choose to do, why not?
Up the hills several ridges from me, there are several 8,000 to 10,000
sq ft McMansions with two people living in them.
Are you saying some people prefer living upwind of you?
Scratch
2007-07-30 16:42:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by ~ Paul Berg ~
~
From KATU News (Portland, Oregon)
Olmpia, Washington -- Talk about down-sizing! One woman is living in a
house that you really have to see to believe.
"It's 84 square feet, so roughly the size of a parking spot. Actually,
smaller than a parking spot," says Dee Williams, who decided it was
time to move. She was living in a 1,500-square foot home in Portland,
but decided the house wasn't small enough - yes, small enough!
Dee built the tiny cabin herself out of salvaged material. She picked
the door out of a dumpster and retrieved the floors from a house fire.
Dee's new tiny home sits in her friend's backyard.
"In exchange, I do work on their house," she says.
It takes Dee five steps, sometimes four, to get from one end of her
house to the other.
"Two steps through the kitchen and you're in my living room. Two steps
into the living room, you bang into the wall," Dee says, laughing.
Two solar panels provide electricity. A tiny propane tank allows Dee
to cook in her $10,000 home on wheels. Do her friends think the
44-year-old hazardous waste inspector is crazy?
"My friends definitely thought, well, they had some questions for me!"
she says.
The obvious question: Why?
"A simpler life, time, more money. I don't have a mortgage. I don't
have a big utility bill," Dee says.
Her monthly heating bill in the winter is $6, less in the summer.
"I'm able to offer money to my family if they need it, (and to) my
friends if they need it," says Dee.
To get to her bedroom, she walks up a step ladder to her loft.
"Every night I look at the stars and watch it rain over and over
again. So this is it. Not much to it," says Dee.
And that's the point. Not much to it. Simple. Small. A dream house
tinier than a parking spot.
"Right now there's nowhere else I want to be!"
(End of News Article)
~
Poster's Note: I can just hear the urban planners now: "How small can
we go on those in-fill lots?"
~
Attachment decoded: untitled-2.txt
--WebTV-Mail-7409-7287
<html><img
src="http://www1.whdh.com/images/news_articles/389x205/070717_small_hom
e.gif" width=100%></html>
Attachment decoded: untitled-3.htm
--WebTV-Mail-7409-7287--
or where is our $15,000 for a building permit and did she do a lot split
e.t.c. you know the govt going to have their grubby hand out now that the
story has broke. Also I think in Some non-Capitalist countries this is
the norm?
Don Homuth
2007-07-30 16:49:16 UTC
Permalink
On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 11:42:14 -0500, Scratch
Post by Scratch
or where is our $15,000 for a building permit
Most likely didn't require one for a travel trailer.
Post by Scratch
and did she do a lot split e.t.c.
Did you actually read the story? It's on wheels.
Post by Scratch
you know the govt going to have their grubby hand out now that the
story has broke.
Why? What she has is a travel trailer.
Post by Scratch
Also I think in Some non-Capitalist countries this is
the norm?
In no non-capitalist countries is a travel trailer the norm.
Scratch
2007-07-31 01:13:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by Don Homuth
On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 11:42:14 -0500, Scratch
Post by Scratch
or where is our $15,000 for a building permit
Most likely didn't require one for a travel trailer.
Post by Scratch
and did she do a lot split e.t.c.
Did you actually read the story? It's on wheels.
I missed the words "on wheels" I seen house I seen cabin I did not notice
on wheels. Now I realize that telling the truth is a sign of weakness to
the left but there ya have it.
Gordon
2007-07-31 04:05:13 UTC
Permalink
Post by ~ Paul Berg ~
~
From KATU News (Portland, Oregon)
Olmpia, Washington -- Talk about down-sizing! One woman is living in a
house that you really have to see to believe.
"It's 84 square feet, so roughly the size of a parking spot. Actually,
smaller than a parking spot," says Dee Williams, who decided it was
time to move. She was living in a 1,500-square foot home in Portland,
but decided the house wasn't small enough - yes, small enough!
Yawn! Old news. I read about this more than a year ago in
the Oregonian. And KATU is just now picking this up??
Paul Johnson
2007-07-31 04:48:54 UTC
Permalink
Post by Gordon
Yawn! Old news. I read about this more than a year ago in
the Oregonian. And KATU is just now picking this up??
The AP just picked it up, so everyone and their brother's reporting on
it now.
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