Tiny House in a Landscape

Goldfinch at night

This week’s Tiny House in a Landscape photo is a house that has been featured on the Tiny House Blog a couple of times before. Just recently, it was added as a new AirBnB house that you can rent. See the post here. This is the Goldfinch, built by Bungalow … Read more

Goldfinch For Sale

Golfinch Great Room Listing Main Image

This tiny guest house by Bungalow to Go offers 120 square feet of living space permanently attached to a 16′ 10,000 pound capacity utility trailer. This guest house has an open great room that allows flexibility for ground floor sleeping. The split loft design leaves a cathedral ceiling open in … Read more

Tiny House “Cooking Show”?

bungalow to go

You may remember Pepper Clark from our posts about her work on the Towhee or the Priya. Though she’s honored and excited to work for Tumbleweed Tiny House Company teaching workshops, she and Dylan Pankow are still bringing their unique skillset to the community with a new project from Bungalow … Read more

Tiny House in a Landscape

bungalow to go reflection

This week’s Tiny House in a Landscape is of a photo I took recently across the valley at Pepper Clark’s and Dylan Pankow’s business, Bungalow To Go. This photo was taken down beside the pond where they build their tiny houses. What always catches my attention when I visit is … Read more

Tiny House in a Landscape

One of the neat things about living in Sonoma County is that there is always something related to tiny houses going on. This last week I enjoyed a visit with Tammy and Logan and got to get caught up on their move and what it is like living in their … Read more

Introducing Bungalow to Go

Guest post by Paprika Clark

There’s a new tiny house company in town, and our name is Bungalow to Go (www.bungalowtogo.com).

Hi, my name is Paprika Clark, but a lot of folks call me Pepper. Although I only named it a few months ago, I started my house design company in spirit when I noticed an ad for a new subdivision in the newspaper at the age of six. Next to an elevation sketch was a floor plan. I couldn’t take my eyes off it. The rooms were named. I could recognize an overhead view of a toilet, and the distinct round burners on the stove in the kitchen. I created a three dimensional projection in my mind and walked around “my new house” picking out my room and figuring out where we would put our couch. It was magical and I was hooked.

I started drawing my dream house then and I’ve never stopped. In the beginning they were huge and often strange, with lavish impossible features. Ponds with lily pads, indoor pools, waterfalls, tree houses, cave complexes, three story libraries with enormous rolling ladders, fireman’s poles, secret tunnels, maze gardens, green roofs, greenhouses, orchards, fire pits, dance floors… my houses had it all.

Read more