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Tiny House Dweller Becomes Reluctant Lobbyist

Vera's Silver Bullet Tiny House

Vera Struck has been a lifelong sustainability and environmental advocate.

Overcoming three bouts of cancer, and two with Lyme, she retired 20 years ago from a successful career in high finance, art, and consulting to pursue her intention of finding her piece of the American Dream, albeit tiny.

For Vera that meant an affordable, aesthetically pleasing mobile structure made in large part of recycled and up-cycled non-toxic materials. She achieved this in 2012 and took her Silver Bullet Tinyhouse 17,500 miles around the USA as a model of how to live a zero-waste sustainable lifestyle.

Two ebooks, 14 speaking circuits, and four years later she found she had become a reluctant and passionate lobbyist to legalize this often misunderstood housing product.

Ethan met Vera a decade ago when they were both invited to speak at Deek Diedrickson’s Tiny House workshop in Connecticut.

She explained that Ethan’s first pictures of his tiny house that he built in 2012 with rain screen inspired her to deep dive into everything from thermal bridging to mold mitigation for the build of her silver bullet tiny house.

When Vera takes on a project or issue you can bet she’s thorough, persistent, and resilient.

Vera has been on the podcast twice before, the last time she discussed pandemic tiny house living at the very beginning of 2020.

Today, she will help us learn about her process of becoming an active participant in democracy to legalize the very housing product she’s lived in for over a decade in Massachusetts.

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In This Episode:

 

Vera’s Silver Bullet Tiny House

Vera at Movable Tiny House Bill S897 Hearing

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