Susan Boyce wrote:I have been looking for a better place to live and found 3 1/2 acres on a watershed. It has a spring and a cistern. The well has no pump but was tested with a generator and a pump. I would need almost 4K to get the well system set up. It has a huge shop but no insulation no floor and only 2 man doors nothing big enough to get a vehicle in or anything else bigger. It has a creek in front but not on the property. It's surrounded by trees from the other land owner. It's at 1700 ft.
I'm trying to get my place ready to sell. If I moved there now I would need a place to live in and would have to buy a shipping container that now cost 5K for a 40 ft and $1200 to deliver it from the dock on Oregon. The house smells of mold and I see the floor is rotted. Other then that its peaceful and away from traffic cities etc.
Any ideas?
This is only me, but I would buy an old van and live in it. I just bought one that I want to convert into a very, very basic camper. I bought it from a government auction site. It has 33,000 miles and I bought it for $485 with all the fees. It was a postal van. I could very easily live in it in a mild climate like the one in Oregon. If you are living there alone, you could just put a
humanure bucket system in the big shop. If you have other people there, you could do the same and just build a small structure to house it.
If the house has structural damage, it may not be worth trying to repair it, and you may be better off starting over. Depending on your goals, you could build a tiny house and move into that while you built something bigger, if indeed you need something bigger at all. I have seen a number of people that didn't want to go into debt build a series of small structures, one at a time, and each became a "room", but no in one building. So, a tiny house to live in that could be converted to just a bedroom after you get the next little building made, which may be a kitchen, or a bathroom, or whatever.
Another option would be to start building and convert the shop into a house the same way, a little at a time.
Shipping containers work well for some people, but they come with their own issues that cost money in addition to the upfront cost.