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More so than previous years, 2020 saw the acceleration of the tendency to live greener, more sustainable, and preferably more mobile lives. Tiny houses and all manners of half-mobile living units became the focal point, but the former (still) have the massive disadvantage of prohibitive pricing.
The Gaia Off-the-Grid House Is How You Duly Repurpose a Shipping Container 25 Jan 2021, 13:13 UTC ·
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This living unit has almost all the advantages of a tiny house at a fraction of the price. It doesn’t have wheels, so you can’t tow it across the country or around the world if you suddenly get bit by the traveling bug, but it’s a repurposed shipping container and, as such, it could be moved around if you wanted to. At the very least, it’s more mobile than an actual house built on the ground.
Standing at 1320 Park St., the stately Federal-style columns of the Grider House, hidden mostly from view by thick foliage, are home to a largely forgotten history.
The home, named for Union Army Col. John Hobson Grider â no known relation to the Hobson House â is said to have been where the provisional government of the Confederacy met when it briefly occupied and named Bowling Green as its state capital during the Civil War.
According to its current residents and homeowners, Dr. Gordon Newell and Regina Newell, the effective Confederate state Capitol building hosted notable names like John C. Breckinridge â the native Kentuckian and Confederate general who was once the 14th vice president, serving under the embattled one-term President James Buchanan and the predecessor of President Abraham Lincoln.