Archive for January, 2008

Tiny Texas Houses

Bigger is not always better, says Texas home builder
By John Moritz

Luling — To Brad Kittel’s way of thinking, everything should be tinier in Texas.Well, maybe some things.

Kittel builds and sells a line of undersized houses that can serve as anything from a backyard hideaway to an intimate bed-and-breakfast cottage to an artist’s loft and workshop.

His tiny houses are made from salvaged lumber and building materials, and even though the smallest ones are generally about 200 square feet, they come wired for electricity and outfitted for plumbing, including a shower and toilet and a loft for sleeping.

“One person could live comfortably here, maybe even two people,” the 52-year-old Kittel said while standing inside a modestly furnished model on his manufacturing site where Interstate 10 and Texas 80 meet south of Luling.

“It wouldn’t do for a family with kids, but these things are roomier than they might look.”

Kittel spun off his Tiny Texas Houses business from the more established Discovery Architectural Antiques that he and his wife, Suzanne, operate in nearby Gonzalez. He began working on his first model in April and began selling them in July.

Some look like barns, with the vintage fading red paint; some resemble 19th-century chapels and some are done in Victorian style.

No two are exactly alike, Kittel said, because the raw materials come from demolition projects from such disparate locations as Kansas City, New Braunfels and Buffalo, N.Y.And none of them is cheap, he added. Prices range from about $30,000 to near $60,000. They are built at the Luling facility and transported by truck and trailer to the customer.

“Salvage lumber is way more expensive than new,” he said, extolling the virtues of old-growth timber and the process used to preserve exterior wood when Texas and other Western states were being settled. “It’s labor-intensive to make ready for reuse, but these houses could last for another 100 years.”

Tara Weaver, an Austin-area artist who purchased one of Kittel’s first little houses, said she was attracted by their aesthetic charm and their functionality.

“I love it,” said Weaver, a painter, who nestled her split-level ranch-style house with a rusted corrugated metal roof near a wooded creek on her 20 acres southwest of Austin. “It gives me a nice view of the land while I do my painting. And because it’s made from recycled material, it looks like it’s been here forever.”

Kittel said the vintage look is something he and his crew of about six strive to attain. The assembly area just a few hundred yards from the San Marcos River looks something like a museum for discarded building material. Doors and windows that date back to the 1880s, many containing original glass and hardware, are stacked inside a warehouse.

Old nails have been pulled from weathered framing lumber waiting to be resized to make the wall studs for one of the three tiny houses under construction or on order. Kittel appears particularly proud of a collection of aging 40-foot timbers reclaimed from a demolished warehouse in Kansas City.”We’re pretty much seeing the last of lumber like this,” he said. “The old-growth forests are pretty much all gone, and trees never get this tall in what we’re replacing them with.”

Kittel said that his model homes attract considerable attention from motorists on I-10, and he’s hoping to capitalize on the visibility. Visit Tiny Texas Houses.


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Timber Frame Cottage

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24′x24′ Hennin Post & Beam Cottage Plans by Shelter Institute.

Perfect for a vacation cottage or for the full timer living the small house and less is more life style. If your considering a super-insulated timberframe that reflects your lifestyle and goals. Shelter Institute is an ideal place to start planning for a new timber frame. Pricing for the 24′x24′ Hennin Post & Beam Cottage starts at:

24′x24′pre-cut kit
$15,985
kit raising
3,065
SIP** Enclosure
19,895
Install SIPs
7,510
metal roofing
2,100
Install Roofing
1,800
24′x24′ Subtotal
50,355
Plus your foundation, permit costs, etc.

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Yurta

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Yurts are a good place to to try out tiny house living as we’ve stated before. Here’s a nice design from The Bakery Group called the Yurta. They’re built in the Lanark Highlands area of Canada using local and sustainable materials, including white ash and cedar. Yurta’s structure is made of wood with the outer covers marine canvas or polyesters.

I like the yurta structure because the usual lattice is minimized and the windows are more open than in other yurt structures. This yurt is also easily moved because the weight is less than 300 lbs. and fits in a 4 x 8 foot trailer. Yurta states that 2 people can assemble the yurt in 45 minutes. Here is what they have to say about there yurta:

“The circular space is simply beautiful; combining the finest elements of traditional and modern designs. The structure of the wall, or lattice, is minimized to not only make transport and setup easier, but to add a lighter look and feel to the space. With less structure in the way, windows are accessible and airy…making the indoors of the Yurta feel like an extension of its natural surroundings. The canvas shell allows for a gentle glow with little to obstruct the sounds of its outdoor environment.”

General Pricing

Yurta Model 17.72 (6′ Wall) Entry PackageWood frame, Door assembly, Sky dome, Outer covers with 3 windows.CA $7, 700

Yurta Model 17.72 (6′ Wall) 4 Season PackageWood frame, Door assembly, Sky dome, Outer covers with 3 windows, Fullinsulation (wool felt), Wall liner.CA $11,150

The models above are standard packages, which can be customized byselecting additional windows and fabric colours.

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