Santa Fe New Mexican

Tiny, trendy — and unwanted

Super-small houses are all the rage, unless they go up next door

- By Scott McFetridge

As he tows a 96-square-foot house around Des Moines, Joe Stevens is overwhelme­d by the intense, sometimes tearful support he receives from churches, schools and service groups for his plan to use the trendy little structures to help homeless people.

But when Stevens actually tried to create a village of the homes in Iowa’s largest city, the response was far different.

“We got shot down,” said Stevens, who leads a group that proposed erecting 50 tiny homes on a 5-acre industrial site north of downtown Des Moines. “It was a sense of fear, uncertaint­y and doubt, a kneejerk situation.”

Tiny homes have been promoted as the solution to all kinds of housing needs — shelter for the homeless, an affordable option for expensive big cities and simplicity for people who want to declutter their lives. But the same popularity that inspired at least six national TV shows about the homes often fails to translate into acceptance when developers try to build them next door.

In at least a dozen cases across the nation, neighbors organized to stop tiny house projects, including in Charlotte, N.C.; Nashville, Tenn.; San Jose, Calif.; Tulsa, Okla.; Tallahasse­e, Fla.; and Bend, Ore. Sometimes the efforts moved ahead despite objections, but in many cases, the communitie­s were blocked.

The president of the American Tiny House Associatio­n said opposition arises even among people who feel an affinity for the homes.

“People say, ‘Tiny home are great and cool, and you can put that village anywhere but right across the street from my subdivisio­n,’ ” said Chris Galusha,

who is also a Fort Worth, Texas, area builder.

The current interest in small houses follows a steady growth in the median size of homes, from 1,200 square feet in the 1940s to about 1,860 square feet in this decade.

As home sizes spiraled up, tiny house pioneers in the 1990s began promoting the austerity and frugality of spaces smaller than most garages. The idea captivated millions of Americans, even those who remain in more spacious accommodat­ions.

“It’s an aspiration­al lifestyle, and it’s fun to watch people try to do something difficult, which is to live contrary to the general trend, which is more space,” said Ben Keys, a real estate professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Wharton School.

The opposition is often focused on developmen­ts for homeless people, as in Des Moines. But in many cases, it also extends to tiny home communitie­s designed for the open market.

That’s what happened in Charlotte, where a developer had hoped to build 56 tiny homes near a neighborho­od filled with ranch houses and split-levels. Opponents argued that the tiny homes would clash with existing housing, cause traffic problems and fail financiall­y due to the cost of the 500-square-foot homes, which would be priced at about $90,000.

“The tiny houses, we feel they’re a fad,” said Robert Wilson, who helped lead the opposition. “It’s a niche market, and we think it is not less expensive.”

A similar story unfolded in the high-desert resort city of Bend, where owners of a developmen­t inspired by author J.R.R. Tolkien’s vision of a Middle Earth paradise were shocked when they learned of plans for a 22-lot tiny home developmen­t that would wrap around many existing houses.

“I think tiny homes are great and people can enjoy them if they like, but please don’t put them in our neighborho­od,” said Joanna White Wolff, who fears existing home values could drop by $100,000 if the tiny developmen­t proceeds. “My home is my sanctuary, and it’s going to be destroyed by different thinking.”

Wolff and her neighbors are considerin­g legal action to block the developmen­t if city leaders approve the plan, she said.

For his project to help the homeless, Stevens arranged for high school and college students to build the houses, with donations to cover costs. But after being thwarted in the search for a building site, the Des Moines group he heads, called Joppa, turned to the nearby city of Van Meter about locating the village there.

“We’re not giving up because we really do believe this is an answer to a serious problem,” said Stevens, who noted that about 250 people are typically homeless in the Des Moines area.

The homeless population in San Jose is much larger — an estimated 4,000 people. That city would like to offer tiny houses as a solution, but one middle-class neighborho­od has threatened to file a lawsuit.

“People are sympatheti­c toward the homeless, but to put this in an establishe­d neighborho­od doesn’t make sense,” said Jon Kanter, a retiree who has lived in the neighborho­od for nearly 40 years.

It’s a comparable situation in Nashville, where residents went to court to stop the zoning board from approving a church’s plans to build a village of 22 tiny homes for homeless people.

Some homeless advocates also oppose the move to offer tiny houses to homeless people, saying the money could be better spent subsidizin­g their move into traditiona­l apartments.

In Tallahasse­e, a privately funded developmen­t called The Dwellings will open this fall, with 11 of an eventual 130 tiny houses intended for homeless people who have some resources. Residents will pay $550 to $850 a month for homes up to 410 square feet, a price that also includes meals and a range of other services.

Before the developmen­t could become a reality, backers had to give up on plans to locate it within the city because of zoning issues and then successful­ly fight a lawsuit filed by neighbors.

Tiny home supporters point to successes in Madison, Wis., Seattle and Portland and Eugene, Ore.

Sometimes communitie­s actually seek out tiny home developmen­ts, although it is rare.

That’s what happened in Colorado, where Pueblo-based Sprout Tiny Homes has been building tiny houses and then trucking them to cities that need affordable housing. More than 40 of the homes serve as seasonal housing for workers in the exorbitant­ly expensive resort city of Aspen. Others serve as overnight rentals in the city of Lyons, near Rocky Mountain National Park. The latest effort is a market-rate developmen­t of 200 homes on nearly 20 acres in the city of Salida.

Company President Rod Stambaugh said the key to avoiding opposition is to fill a need and take pains to be clear about your intentions.

“You have to have a fullblown plan that’s well thought out,” he said.

Some homeless advocates also oppose the move to offer tiny houses to homeless people, saying the money could be better spent subsidizin­g their move into traditiona­l apartments.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? ABOVE: A resident walks past a row of tiny houses at a homeless encampment in Seattle earlier this month. Tiny homes could be the solution to all kinds of housing needs, but developers in cities across the country have met resistance.
ELAINE THOMPSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ABOVE: A resident walks past a row of tiny houses at a homeless encampment in Seattle earlier this month. Tiny homes could be the solution to all kinds of housing needs, but developers in cities across the country have met resistance.
 ?? CHARLIE NEIBERGALL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? LEFT: Joe Stevens stands in one of the tiny homes his group has built in Des Moines, Iowa.
CHARLIE NEIBERGALL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LEFT: Joe Stevens stands in one of the tiny homes his group has built in Des Moines, Iowa.
 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Eva Stough opens the door to her tiny house, where she lives with her partner and baby, at a homeless encampment in Seattle. The opposition to tiny houses is often focused on developmen­ts for homeless people.
ELAINE THOMPSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Eva Stough opens the door to her tiny house, where she lives with her partner and baby, at a homeless encampment in Seattle. The opposition to tiny houses is often focused on developmen­ts for homeless people.

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