“This is like a treat,” Pruitt said after the group explored the 154-square-foot model named Shonsie, made by 84 Lumber. The company offers the portable houses at different levels of completion, from a custom steel trailer and blueprints to a fully finished dwelling on wheels. “It has everything but the washer and dryer.”
They had explored the sleeping loft and admired the amount of storage and interesting fixtures in the tiny house.
“It’s a chance to go greener,” Donahue said, referring features such as the house’s toilet, which can convert from composting to operating on a more traditional water line. A 30-gallon storage tank also supplies water. Power can be supplied by a generator or solar panels.
“If I could buy this right now, I’d do it in a heartbeat,” Doll said. He’s an avid “Tiny House Nation” watcher who admits, “I absorb all that stuff.”
Tiny Living by 84 Lumber houses range in price from $6,884 for just the trailer and plans to $59,884 for a move-in-ready, fully outfitted tiny home.
In addition to the cottage-style Shonsie, 84 Lumber also offers the contemporary Degsy and more rustic Roving tiny house models.
Consumer interest in tiny houses has been growing, John Starceski of 84 Lumber said, though municipal acceptance has had slower growth.
“It depends on zoning, but they’re becoming more accepting of it,” he said.
A tiny house can be a permanent dwelling or taken on trips like a travel trailer, Starceski said.
“You can take it to the woods for a hunting camp, to the beach, up to the mountains,” he said. “You truly can go off the grid with it, if you want.”
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