The tiny house custom RV is complete and earning revenue for the homestead!
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After seven and a half years, I've finally completed and put the tiny house RV I've been building into operation at the homestead.
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I started building it in November 2016 thinking I could complete the project in a year but I fell victim to the common homesteading practice of building many systems at once. Since my time and energy was split between so many projects at once, the time I had for working on the tiny house was quickly narrowed down to a few months in the winter.
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The days were short and the weather was challenging, plus I was learning many of the techniques from scratch, teaching myself as I went. This made for very slow progress.
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However, there were some benefits of moving small and slow on the project. I was able to avoid making any critical/costly mistakes. I also had lots of time to souce cheap and unique reclaimed/recycled materials. Plus, I was able to totally customize and build each component to be unique, leading to it feeling like a work of art rather than a construction project.
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For now, I don't think I'll be taking on another project of this scale again anytime soon. But in the end, I taught myself all the skills to build a house from framing and roofing to plumbing and electrical, on down to the finishing techniques for trim.
https://i.nostr.build/SRxY1eOrdNKksWRb.jpg
The intellectual and experiencial capital was definitely worth having so much financial capital tied up in the project for so long. Before I know it, I will have earned it all back anyway leaving me with much more capital than I started with. Low time preference paying off.
#permaculture #permies #homesteading #meshtadel #carpentry #woodworking #tinyhouse
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Looks amazing! Nicely done!
Beaut! Hope to make one some day
Looks great!!! Must be satisfying to finally see that project complete and start to produce something for your farm 🙌🏼
7 years of work, must feel amazing getting it done after such a long perid. Looks great!
Interesting! You had to follow local zoning laws or you just..built it? (I know depends a lot on jurisdiction)
It's an RV and I'm zone agricultural so it's very lax.
Interesting! Where I am from, even mobile homes permits in agricultural land is very strict, like max 6 months and it MUST have functional wheels to demonstrate is not permanent establishment.
I always been envious of boomers, they basically bought cheap land, built villas and then paid a simple fine: boom premium real estate!
Local zoning is incredibly important to understand, it's wildly different everywhere.
This is so cool. Would love to try building something like this myself eventually.