Arch: Tiny and Modular homes
Tiny Home built in 11 minutes
Container homes
Two homes connected to make one big one
There's a tiny home design competition
A home delivered and then clicked together.
TH: Housing
How modular homes might save the housing market in Canada
New use for a tiny home in the backyard? The Granny Flat
Toronto intends to use very small homes to take care of homeless.
TH: Luxury
A very artsy tiny home
Two story luxury tiny home
A luxury tiny home that lets you move the bed out on rails to see the stars.
Full wiring and plumbing for $16.5K
Two story modular home
There is a Frank Lloyd Wright kit house
A luxury cabin tiny home with two bedrooms
$40,000 tiny home seats 3 with nice open windows on one side.
TH: Villages
Tiny Home village is now full
Ottawa students can use Micro Homes
Ann Arbor tiny home village told to leave
New Jersey Mid Century Beach Houses
Bud house tiny home village. That sounds like a Google search
A small town has all the modern architecture
TPM: Websites
An interview with owner of a Prefab modular website
Modular homes company has several options
Arch: Winners
Winners of a rendered architecture competition
Winners of a design contest
The 20 A' Design Award winners
Under the Bridge winners
Arch: Impractical Artsy Homes
Open designed house with 7 courtyards
A house that looks at white vs black
Brazilian House that sticks everything out to extend the house.
I like the library placement in this one, but the idea that a farm can be made on a home in the city is very impractical
This curvy brick home
Underground courtyard with circle passageways
Hien house is basically stairs for every room
Walking in circles house
Minimalist apartment in an attic
The layout is cool but dumb on this one.
Outdoor office
Open Boxy home with a roof in a forest
This giant house has a single roof
Vast shuttered walls and boxy look and feel
A semi three story house that makes you take the stairs, and then take the stairs. The outside is weird and dark.
Rounded facade for an apartment complex. The concept artist designed it.
A giant cement circle with odd shapes as windows. Nothing inside. Very artsy
Polly Pocket BNB
https://www.instagram.com/reel/C-bGLM_SSl9/?igsh=bXA2eGV1cjlmaTcy
An hourglass shaped glass museum
An entire interview and look at a guy who design horrible artsy homes. They use the word Interdisciplinary
CHCW House. I like the open eating area, but it doesn't look like a home at all.
Wedge shaped house
White Japanese building with low ceilings
A bunch of buildings that were never built
This is a very weird looking artsy house
Rounded rising house. Impractical to live in, but cool looking.
I always love it, when you can immediately tell, whether or not the designer/architect does their own cleaning.
I know it gets a lot of shit for being part of the "live in the pod" idea, but I don't have a problem with tiny houses, and would probably preferentially live in one provided it was well-constructed with normal amenities. I've been poor for a long portion of my life, and thus my living spaces have always been very small. I don't own very much, and due to my personality, I never entertain guests, nor do I have any interest in creating a family. I just can't imagine myself owning a big house on a big lot for the sake of resisting globalism, or whatever.
I think a really important aspect of the delineation between small homes and pods is the intended purpose. Pods are, first and foremost, designed to be nothing more than glorified beds with some added luxuries. It's not living, it's barely above surviving. Meanwhile a small home can be a viable type of living.
I think the clearest and best way to see the difference between the two is both the available amenities (pods generally opt for shared amenities, meaning it's not yours), and environment. You can have a little cottage out in a rural area just fine, while a pod is designed to fit as many people in as small a space as possible.
The end result does dramatically differ for the end result. One is a choice. The other is pushed by those that don't have to live in a pod.
You just described life in the navy.
pods are one step above tents and cars, thats about it. when I'm traveling alone I would take that over sleeping in a car. I don't need a full hotel room just for myself.
in fact its just the plain old barracks concept with a trendy name and a bit more privacy. and absolutely unreasonable pricing.
It's an interesting subject because a smart person could have several tiny homes interconnected but obviously separate and have a mansion that cost less than a house with less rooms.