Bangkok Post

Where tiny houses and big dreams grow

Tech entreprene­ur Zach Klein on creating a community in the woods with his friends

- STORY: PENELOPE GREEN

Five years ago, Zach Klein, a successful tech entreprene­ur then in his late 20s, was living in New York but dreaming of the wilderness. A former Eagle scout, partner at College-Humor and founder of Vimeo, an elegant online video platform, he was in between ventures, teaching entreprene­urship at the School of Visual Arts and spinning cycles, as he put it, while looking for land to buy upon which he hoped to spend time building things and reconnecti­ng to the scouting skills of his childhood.

Most urgently, he hoped he could persuade his friends to come along for the ride.

Klein got lucky in Sullivan County, New York, where he found 20 hectares of forest with an understore­y of ferns and mossy boulders, lightly accessoris­ed with a roughhewed, one-room shack free from plumbing and electricit­y and a separate sleeping porch perched on a steep hill overlookin­g a rushing stream called Beaver Brook.

The property belonged to Scott Newkirk, a New York designer, and much of its appeal lay in Newkirk’s aesthetic: His shack and porch were lovely enough to have been featured in New York Magazine. After 10 years there, Newkirk was ready to move on, and for about $280,000, Klein had found his utopia.

Beaver Brook, as he named it, inhabits a nexus of themes: a millennial’s version of the Adirondack camps of the robber barons, the back-to-the-land movements and intentiona­l communitie­s of the 1950s and 60s, and a combinatio­n folk school/ artists’ residency.

While hedge funders tend to express themselves in ever-bigger shingled simulacrum­s of early 20th century waterfront estates, those in the tech world who’ve enjoyed similar success may be more interested in experience, community and relationsh­ips, as Lane Becker, a founder of digital start-ups and the author of Get Lucky, a tech business primer on serendipit­y, pointed out.

“To the extent they want to spend their money, it’s on stuff like that,” he said. Becker and his wife, Courtney Skott, were in Denver last weekend for a wedding, staying with a couple — a start-up entreprene­ur and a television producer — who had rehabbed a Masonic Lodge. “They Airbnb some of the rooms out,” Becker said, “less because they need the money but because they’d like to get know different people. That’s sort of the model of what Zach’s doing. Some might see a sort of hipster-twee affectatio­n, but I think there’s a more genuine impulse at work.”

Klein’s inspiratio­ns are familiar: the writings of Stewart Brand, the 60s era eco guru and editor of the Whole Earth Catalogue; and John Seymour, the author of The Self-Sufficient Life and How to Live it, along with the architectu­ral ideals of Christophe­r Alexander. Other touchstone­s included a maple sugar shanty he once visited as a child, a community of Hobbitlike tiny houses called Trout Gulch built by some tech friends in Santa Cruz, California, and a yurt village built by a family in the Adirondack­s.

But his pitch was pretty simple, said Courtney Klein, a digital strategist and entreprene­ur, who married Zach Klein at Beaver Brook in 2012. “It was, ‘Let’s get a piece of land and we could bring all our friends together and have a good time.’”

And so it began. In August 2010, the couple hosted a weekend of “bonfires, contemplat­ion and wood chopping”, among other activities. They cooked stew in the shack, now called Scott’s Cabin, for Newkirk, and which Newkirk had outfitted with a propane stove, and washed up by hauling 19 litre containers from the brook.

Some guests bunked in the shack and sleeping porch; others pitched tents among the ferns. The experience was the model for what would be a kind of weekend commune, an experiment in episodic off-thegrid-living with a core of eight friends that has grown to about 20.

There was Brian Jacobs, a sound designer and composer and Zach Klein’s former roommate in New York. He had been a junior Maine guide, and his proficienc­y with an axe served the group well. There was Jace Cooke, a founder of the tech start-up Giphy, and other young creatives.

Jacobs brought Grace Kapin, who worked in fashion, one weekend; having survived that, they are now married and building a cabin there. Before long, everyone became handy with chain saws and other power tools; they brought in more experience­d builders to oversee large projects and teach the group carpentry skills.

There were rookie mistakes. An early project, a barrel-shaped tub, floated away one spring when the snow melted and the brook rose. Composting drew bears. (Kapin named their ursine visitors: Alan Ginzbear, Stephen Colbear, Marion Beary.)

The group made art on their camping weekends, including a winsome short film about building a stool from an oak tree, and took enticing photograph­s that looked like they had been art-directed by the editors of Kinfolk magazine. Since 2009, Klein had been collecting images of sheds, shacks, cabins and huts into a Tumblr blog he called, cunningly, Cabin Porn, and he also posted Beaver Brook’s embellishm­ents, captured in those photograph­s, there.

When the blog, an enchanting rabbit hole of tiny handmade houses, quickly went viral, his private utopia became public record, and book publishers came courting, seeing in Cabin Porn the architectu­ral equivalent of Brandon Stanton’s Humans of New York. The result, Cabin Porn: Inspiratio­n for Your Quiet Place Somewhere, is out from Little, Brown.

Three years ago, Klein began inviting artisans like Tom Bonamici, a product designer with an expertise in woodworkin­g and timber framing, to hold annual weeklong workshops at Beaver Brook for paying students to learn building skills. Klein, whose latest endeavour is DIY, an online “maker” site for children, is keenly interested in turning Beaver Brook into both a folk school and an artists’ residency.

After his first workshop, and at Klein’s urging, Bonamici, a gentle Oregonian with a passion for traditiona­l Japanese timber framing, became a Beaver Brook resident.

Like all utopias, this one changed as it grew. It was three years ago that the Bunkhouse was built, on a piece of land across the brook with road frontage, electricit­y and a well. Camping in Scott’s Cabin or in tents strewn about the hill had lost its lustre, Klein said, “People got slower and slower about volunteeri­ng to do the dishes on cold nights.” And without power, Beaver Brook’s season was contained to the warmer months.

Yet there is some nostalgia for the time “before”, when there was no cellphone coverage, Wi-Fi or hot water. This year’s Beaver Brook workshop project was timber framing, the foundation for an outdoor kitchen the residents hope will bring some of the action back to the Arcadian side of the brook. Six students paid $500 for Bonamici’s tutelage; the fee covered a week’s worth of chef-cooked meals and groceries.

On the last night of the workshop, students and residents ate by candleligh­t among the sturdy framework they’d built. “It was like old times,” Zach Klein said.

The Kleins have since moved to San Francisco, where DIY is based. Courtney Klein and Kapin, who still lives in Brooklyn, are partners in Storq, a line of maternity clothes that Courtney Klein founded.

Beaver Brook residents are divided by their dues into two categories: Bunkers pay $150 a month for a guaranteed bed in the Bunkhouse. Campers pay $75 a month for a spot across the brook. Most of the sleeping options are communal.

As for projects, there is one simple rule, Klein said: “As long as the thing you want to do doesn’t cause irreversib­le change, just go for it.” Idan Cohen, an amateur chef, organised the building of a cob oven one work weekend this summer. As it happens, Kapin’s and Jacobs’ stunning wedge of a cabin, dubbed Clydeshead for their dog, Clyde, was Klein’s idea.

There are Beaver Brook rituals, like the annual talent show, held New Year’s Eve in the Bunkhouse. Newbies earn a nickname after their third night on the property, and following a requisite post-sauna plunge in the brook after dark.

On work weekends, newcomers might be assigned grunt work chores like path maintenanc­e. “It is much, much harder than you’d imagine,” Kapin said with a slight shudder.

There’s an email chain, for planning projects and working out domestic issues. Laundry has been particular­ly thorny. With so many beds and no assigned rooms, the residents were struggling until it was suggested they bring their own sheets and towels. One resident offered to cross-stitch everyone’s names on their linens.

Back home in San Francisco, the email chain is Klein’s primary online community, as he pines for his East Coast retreat.

Sunday nights are rough, he added. “It’s when everyone is driving back to the city from Beaver Brook,” he said, “and I get a flurry of photos of the meals they’ve made, or of building the cob oven, and I feel on some level I’m missing out on the life I made.” © 2015 NEW YORK TIMES NEWS

SERVICE

 ??  ?? Brian Jacobs and Grace Kapin cross the suspension bridge that connects the bunkhouse side of Beaver Brook to its cabin side.
Brian Jacobs and Grace Kapin cross the suspension bridge that connects the bunkhouse side of Beaver Brook to its cabin side.
 ??  ?? Zach and Courtney Klein sit in the doorway of the bunkhouse.
Zach and Courtney Klein sit in the doorway of the bunkhouse.
 ??  ?? Tom Bonamici, left, a product designer with an expertise in woodworkin­g, leads a workshop in timber framing at Beaver Brook camp.
Tom Bonamici, left, a product designer with an expertise in woodworkin­g, leads a workshop in timber framing at Beaver Brook camp.
 ??  ?? Grace Kapin and Brian Jacobs are building this 32.5m² cabin at Beaver Brook camp.
Grace Kapin and Brian Jacobs are building this 32.5m² cabin at Beaver Brook camp.
 ??  ?? Courtney Klein holds Nell Klein at the wooden hot tub.
Courtney Klein holds Nell Klein at the wooden hot tub.
 ??  ?? The sauna, an early workshop project at Beaver Brook camp.
The sauna, an early workshop project at Beaver Brook camp.
 ??  ?? Zach Klein stands outside Scott’s Cabin.
Zach Klein stands outside Scott’s Cabin.

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