Bridge Tender Houses

I recently got back from a trip to Europe to visit family and kept my eye out for tiny houses across the pond. What caught my attention in downtown Copenhagen, Denmark was a steel and copper bridge tender house. My husband and I actually peaked into the windows and contemplated if we could buy one of these things and spend our days watching the traffic and bicyclers speed past. These particular bridge tending homes are now being used as municipal offices, but I think most of these types of buildings would make great tiny houses along the lines of a lighthouse…utilitarian and beautiful.

Copenhagen, Denmark. Photo by Harry Thomas/Silver Monkey.net

In the past, bridge tenders were needed to run the electronics and machinery that raised and lowered bridges on major rivers, waterways and railroad bridges. The machinery was kept in a small house near or on the bridge and the bridge tender would spend most of their time in the house, or even lived there. Their jobs consisted of controlling and monitoring traffic around the bridges, keeping the bridge and the raising/lowering mechanism in good condition and running telegraph machines and other communications. Most bridge tender houses were usually built by government departments of transportation.

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Tiny House Network Analysis

Jeff Hemsley of Mobile Cottage recently ran an analysis of the tiny house network. He says: I am doing network analysis as a topic of study and decided to take a quick look at the tiny house network. It turns out, not surprisingly, that the Tiny House Blog is a … Read more

Tiny House in a Landscape

Colorado Yurt Owner Michael Drummy bought 15 acres in rural, picturesque northern New Mexico – “O’Keeffe Country” it’s called because the painter Georgia O’Keeffe lived there for the second half of her life. After buying the property outright we didn’t have the means to build anything very expensive down there. … Read more

Contemporary Prairie Schooner

Libby Reinish and Tristan Chambers contacted me about a project they are working on and wanted to share with you.

My partner and I are building a bow-top gypsy wagon and documenting our progress on www.whittleddown.com. This is our first tiny house, and we will be moving into it in one month, when we depart our home in Santa Fe, NM and begin a cross-country move to New England. We plan to live in the wagon for the remaining warm months of the year, and haven’t entirely ruled out retrofitting it for winter living later. The wagon is based on a gypsy wagon design, but we like to think of it as a contemporary take on the prairie schooner.

Our gypsy wagon design meets our three main goals: 1) To build a home for just over what we currently pay for a month’s rent ($1500 total), 2) To build a portable home that can be towed by my Hyundai Elantra, which has a 1,000 lb tow rating, and 3) To find a design that provides all our basic needs (food prep, sleep, electricity, toilet) in a small space.

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Book Giveaway this Holiday Weekend

Kerri, over at Living Large, is offering a book giveaway this weekend. Many tiny house lovers also like to simplify their lives in other ways. Raising your own chickens and having the ultimate control over your food is a great way to save money and live a more sustainable life. … Read more

Deeks Hickshaw for Sale

Derek (Deek) Diedricksen of Tiny Yellow House fame is selling his Hickshaw to raise some money for some of his other projects. You can view the craigslist ad here. I have also done a screen capture of it below. To really view the hickshaw go and watch his video Episode … Read more