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Let s Reminisce: The tiny house movement
By Jerry Lincecum
Special to the Herald Democrat
The pandemic has sent many homebound Americans desiring more space to live in and scurrying to find it. Sales of large homes are booming. So too are tiny ones. These dwellings often are not much bigger than a standard hotel room. They are built mostly in suburban backyards or converted garages on the West Coast, where new laws designed to ease the region’s housing shortage have encouraged their construction.
The tiny-house movement is an architectural and social movement that advocates living simply in small homes. As you would expect, there are different definitions of tiny.” One prominent Residential Code defines a tiny house as a dwelling unit with a maximum of 400 square feet of floor area, excluding lofts.
In her new book “Living Little,” writer and editor Hannah Jenkins counts the ways and the reasons why we’re drawn to small spaces.
Tiny homes, trailers, rooftop apartments, and prefab cabins the typologies may vary, but together they represent a growing trend toward a simpler, smaller way of living. The motivations to downsize are many, says
Living Little author Hannah Jenkins and they include the high cost of urban areas, and the desire to live affordably on one’s own. But one thing’s for sure It most certainly does not mean we have to compromise on design and quality of life, she writes. Read on for a peek at just a few homes from the book that prove you can live large with a small footprint.