Open House Today

February 13, 2010

It is the second Saturday of the month, and that means Jay is opening his small house to the public. Come see Jay’s home in Graton, CA.

To sign up and get directions, click here

Partner with Tumbleweed?

September 2, 2009

Want to sell a Tumbleweed House from your store?

This summer Jay drove the Fencl across the USA as a show model. Now it is time to sell. We will be promoting it for sale this September on our website. If we don’t sell it by the end of the month, we are looking to partner with a trailer / mobile home dealer to sell the house.

You should be near Connecticut and able to pick the house up. Currently the house is at Jay’s in-laws. [Read more]

Happy Trails II

June 10, 2009

Cincy

I’ve met so many great folks in every city (and at every gas station) I visit. Some folks have driven more than 6 hours just to see the house. Thanks to everyone for the enthusiasm and support.

I look forward to Pittsburgh this evening and Philadelphia tomorrow. Then it is off to New York for the final workshop. It took me nearly an hour to back my way out of a narrow Iowa City driveway with low branches, but, other than that, the house has been pretty easy to tow.

Keep it tiny,
Jay [Read more]

My First Tiny House

April 28, 2009

This is an excerpt from my new book.

This is a six part post. Part 1 Part 2 … more to come.

Tumbleweed

It was not until after I thought I had already finished designing my little dream home that I became familiar with the term “minimum-size standards.” Up to this point, I had somehow managed to remain blissfully unaware of these codes; but, as the time for construction neared, my denial gave way to a grim reality. My proposed home was about one-third the size required to meet local limits. A drastic change of plans seemed unavoidable, but tripling the scale of a structure that had been designed to meet my specific needs so concisely seemed something like altering a tailored suit to fit like a potato sack.

ALPSHOTI resolved to side-step the well-intentioned codes by putting my house on wheels. The construction of travel trailers is, after all, governed by maximum–not minimum–size restrictions, and since Tumbleweed already fit within these, I had only to add some space for wheel wells to make the plan work.

At about eight by twelve feet plus a porch, loft, and four wheels, the resulting house looked a bit like American Gothic meets the Winnebago Vectra. A steep, metal roof was supported by cedar-clad walls and turned cedar porch posts. The front gable was pierced by a lancet window. In the tradition of the formal plan, everything was symmetrical, with the door at exterior, front center. Inside, Knotty Pine walls and Douglas Fir flooring were contrasted by stainless steel hardware. There was a 7’ x 7’ great room, a closet-sized kitchen, an even smaller bathroom, and a 3’ 9”-tall bedroom upstairs. A cast-iron heater presided like an altar at the center of the space downstairs. In fact, the whole house looked a bit like a tiny cathedral on two, 3,500-pound axles.

The key to designing my happy home really was designing a happy life, and the key to that lay not so much in deciding what I needed as in recognizing all the things I can do without. What was left over read like a list I might make before packing my bags for a long trip. While I cannot remember the last time I packed my TV, stereo, or even the proverbial kitchen sink for any journey, I wanted this to be a list of items necessary not only to my survival, but to my contented survival. I am sure any hard-core minimalist would be as appalled by the length of my inventory as any materialist would be by its brevity. But then, I imagine nobody’s list of necessities is ever going to quite match anybody else’s. Each will read like some kind of self-portrait. I like to think that a house built true to the needs of its inhabitant will do the same.

book_125x125The Small House Book
by Jay Shafer

Price: $36.95 Add to Cart

Cathy’s Lusby

December 9, 2008

CathyCongratulations to Cathy from Brookings, Oregon.

“I love all the wood – the look and the smell. The owner of the RV park got a real kick out of my first month’s electric bill – $1.60! Yes, you read that correctly, one dollar and sixty cents! I keep the place lighted at night with one 60 watt bulb in a fixture pointed at the ceiling. It is a lovely, warm light. The heater works well and the water heater as well.” – Cathy