Seed the Mind, Harvest Ideas.
http://farmwhisperer.com
Len wrote:
A friend of mine dropped two older MH down beside each other and cut the wall between. Put a beam where he cut out and floored right through. It is no longer movablebut really nice inside. I think they started out with just the one for years and when they found the other added it. They are slightly staggered which looks less boxy and I think they put a single roof over the whole thing. He deals in used building supplies and most things he builds come from the bits he hasn't sold or connections he has made over the years.
He also builds tiny homes. He has an old RV frame and makes them to fit... so 8x18 or 20 I would guess. He uses standard appliances (tub, fridge, stove etc.) and they are set up for a single person. They are built to look like a house, not a trailer and after he delivers them, he takes his trailer with him so the house is then a permanent house. This is his retirement work, so he builds them as he has time.... when he feels like working... gets 20K each for them so if he sells one a year (he often manages two) he does just fine. (my mother in laws retirement is half that)
spystyle wrote:
I like the "shell" concept.
A mobile home, a bus, a garage, a barn - anything that can be framed, insulated, and dry-walled. For those of us that are not professional home builders, a shell can make it easier
As for the pole barn over the vehicles - I've seen a similar concept before. A (mostly glass) desert home with a gas station style canopy over it. Keeps it in the shade
Hey I found it :
http://www.newhouseofart.com/contemporary-minimalist-desert-house-design/




And he claims they are easy to build.
Things in nature are round LOL
and they do fall apart after a while 

1. my projects
South Carolina wrote:
Love the house shown on the link! Soo Cool! I could be very comfortable there.
Consideration for anything you put on a slab: In our location if you put a structure on a slab it is a taxable stucture. If it is on piers or has a gravel floor it is not taxable.
Our Neighbor found this out AFTER he had already built his shop on a slab. As a result I have one shop on gravel and another on piers.
Can you tell I'm really nit-picky about taxes?


I can build it from material found "on site" for the most part. Since it's up to me how it's built I can integrate passive solar and other "green technologies".









. If you need temporary shelter but eventually want a proper house why not grab an old mobile for next to nothing and plant it in the center of a post-and beam structure. You would need to deal with all grading and drainage issues in advance of the mobiles arrival. The post-and beam structure can be built completely around the mobile leaving just enough room to extract it at some point. In this way you'll have somewhere to live immediately and the horrible inefficiency of a mobile would be somewhat buffered because it would be encased. Mobiles are one of the easiest buildings to demo so you could complete your pole building and live in the mobile for several years if finances won't allow the immediate completion of your home. When you eventually want the mobile gone it will take one man approximately 3 days to rip it apart and haul it out a 3 foot wide door. I'm in the demolition business and have ripped several of these things apart. They melt like butter! The frame would need to be cut up just enough to haul it out the door. You'll have some aluminum and steel to sell and you'll have a small amount of crappy floor coverings, insulation and other waste to get rid of. The wood can be chopped up and burned in your new home. And that's the best use I can think of for a mobile home
Many homesteaders have lived in one of these while building and then turned it into a chicken coop, storage shed or other outbuilding. Your best way to snag a good mobile is to search out news stories concerning mobile parks which are being redeveloped. Invariably the owners are all up in arms because their imagined property values are reduced to a pittance once the unit has to be relocated. A mobile without a secure pad has very little value. Spend some time searching out these stories and don't make the huge mistake of turning a trailer into your primary investment. To do so would be utter folly.
. The beauty of an old mobile is that it has no inherent value so you can walk on it, store stuff on or under it or against it without reducing its value. Do trailer park type stuff. By trailer Park stuff I don't mean heavy drinking followed by can shooting. 


Be kinder than necessary, for everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.
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I never met anyone that I could not learn something from
I never met anyone that I could not learn something from
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