Cape Breton Post

Little house on the. . .

Tapping into the tiny house trend, more businesses offer tryouts of the radically small lifestyle

- XABY COLLIN BINKLEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Hilary and Shane Lentz were hooked on the idea of a tiny house, but they weren’t sure the reality would be so appealing.

Their curiosity led them to the hills of New Hampshire, where a business that started at Harvard University rents out tiny houses for $99 a night. The company, Getaway, has drawn visitors from afar who come to sample life in a 160—square—foot house before they dive headlong into the lifestyle.

“It’s a way to test—drive tiny house living,” said Jon Staff, the founder and CEO of Getaway. “We operate them a little bit like hotel rooms in the woods.”

Across the country, more businesses are letting the curious try out tiny living. Caravan, a hotel in Portland, Oregon, offers six tiny houses ranging from 84 to 170 square feet, for $145 a night. Dozens of tiny houses are available through vacation rental websites, posted by their owners.

Definition­s vary, but some say a tiny house is anything smaller than 400 square feet. Advocates tout the environmen­tal and financial perks of tiny living.

The Lentz couple, from Pittsburgh, had been considerin­g a major downsize for years. It could free them from the mortgage on their three—bedroom home. They could build the house on wheels and take it anywhere. By shedding some belongings, there would be fewer distractio­ns.

“Having a smaller living space allows you to be more open to experience­s, and to really enjoy your day to day life,” said Hilary, 27.

But the couple had a few lingering questions. Shane, 29, wondered whether waterless toilets, a common feature in tiny houses, were odourless, too. They both worried about cooking in a tiny kitchen. Hilary wanted to know whether the coziness would fade to isolation.

Getaway is the first project at Harvard’s Millennial Housing Lab, a group of business, law and design students exploring new housing ideas. Staff, a graduate student in business, said his stints living on a boat and in an Airstream trailer inspired him to help spread the tiny house movement.

“Small spaces force you out into the world, and I think that’s a good thing,” he said.

Backers of tiny living say the movement is growing, and certain areas have become hotspots. Villages of little homes have popped up in cities like Portland and Seattle. Other cities have considered relaxing their zoning rules to open the door for more tiny houses.

But industry experts say it’s hard to pinpoint actual numbers behind the trend. In an annual survey, the National Associatio­n of Realtors found that the share of home buyers who opted for houses of less than 1,000 square feet has stayed at about 1 per cent for the past five years.

“The data is revealing that the tiny—sized home is not what people will consider the American dream,” said Lawrence Yun, the associatio­n’s chief economist.

He predicts that the growth of big cities will fuel demand for smaller apartments and condos, but not stand—alone houses.

Either way, tiny houses have caught the public’s attention as the subject of TV shows and documentar­ies. Popular websites entice audiences to ogle at small houses in bucolic landscapes.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Shane Lentz, of Pittsburgh, Pa., and his wife Hilary, talk before leaving a tiny house, which they rented for a weekend, in Croydon, N.H. As the tiny house phenomenon sweeps the nation, Harvard’s Millennial Housing Lab thinks a tryout is in order for...
AP PHOTO Shane Lentz, of Pittsburgh, Pa., and his wife Hilary, talk before leaving a tiny house, which they rented for a weekend, in Croydon, N.H. As the tiny house phenomenon sweeps the nation, Harvard’s Millennial Housing Lab thinks a tryout is in order for...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada