Less is More. Why tiny house life is the future.

I love watching these videos on youtube: Living Big In A Tiny House. The tiny homes are amazing and it’s fun to hear the stories behind them. It has been a while now, but some months ago we spent our sunday nights watching these inspiring videos and stories for hours in a row. I guess it has been the stepping stone I needed to really move to our own tiny home.

Wild West Wagon

Both the creativity in constructing and the tiny house philosophy appealed to us and Dorus started building one three years ago: a completely sustainable tiny house in the shape of a “Wild West Wagon” at Casita Verde, an ecological centre on Ibiza.

It’s a 15 m2 showcase of an alternative life: small and sustainable with an attached terrace of another 15 m2, so in total a living space of 30 m2. With energy generated by the sun, water harvested from the rain and heating by the super efficient fire of a rocket stove on winter days.

Dorus constructed this tiny home nearly completely of pallets and other up- and re-cycled materials. It’s the first sustainable and ecological off grid tiny home on wheels on Ibiza and an extraordinary way of reducing our ecological footprint.

The “Wild West Wagon” meant more to us than just a showcase of alternative living so we decided to give up our beach studio and moved to live this “tiny home life” in the countryside. It already has changed my life. We’re testing this off grid tiny home since last April and thanks to the sunny climate on Ibiza, which generates more than enough energy, we don’t feel we compromise on comfort.

But we are learning. When there wasn’t any sun for five days in a row last Easter, which is rather exceptional on Ibiza, and we’d still plugged in a thirsty fridge, we were out of electricity on the second, heavily clouded day. On such days it isn’t a good idea either to use the electrical water boiler to make a cup of tea every couple of hours. Instead we lit the rocket stove to warm up the house and to make a cup of tea at once while staring out the window to the low fog hovering over the green hills.

Our tiny home has made me so much more aware of my freedom and surroundings – the free energy we enjoy and also the rain water we use for washing clothes, showers and drinking water. Dreaming away or making plans while having long showers belong to the past now. It gives so much satisfaction and joy to know that Dorus’ hands constructed every inch of this tiny home and that sunlight runs our devices, without damaging the environment and without costs.

I realize living off-grid is easier here, on a sunlit island, than in a colder, rainy climate with strict regulations. If you’re only with the two of you it isn’t such a big deal; for families it’s likely more challenging.

A new way of living

In prosperous times it’s hard to imagine that Western families of ten used to live in a 2-bedroom house or apartment. With the economic growth of the past decades not only GDP per capita has grown, also houses have become bigger in size. We were able to buy bigger houses as economic growth increased and banks began to stimulate consumers — us — to make debts.

I once read that Dutch households are world champions in mortgage debts. No where in the world are mortgage lenders as generous as in the Netherlands resulting in civilians becoming slaves to the banks. Isn’t that dramatic?

Despite the push for more and bigger — and as a protest against it — a new way of living has emerged: in a “tiny home”. We, in the wealthy West, have started discovering we don’t need big amounts of stuff in our lives and wish to live a life free from the need to constantly consume. We know, more stuff doesn’t make us happy. A new wave of “living simply” has been born along the lines of David Thoreau’s “Walden” as an alternative to “bigger is better”.

Tiny home movement

The tiny home movement started as a social and architectural movement in the United States to propagate living in small and tiny houses — a tiny house is mostly 15 m2 between 50 m2—.

Other countries, such as Japan, New Zealand, Germany, Spain and The Netherlands have followed and the interest for tiny houses has grown tremendously. More and more of us have the desire to live differently and living in a tiny home could be it! The tiny house movement can be seen as part of a movement away from money and property-slavery to a more simple and connected way of living.

More than living simply

The reasons to choose for a tiny house are various: from being (financially) independent and free to become less attached to consume and realizing there’s more to life than working to pay the bills. It creates space to engage in (other) meaningful things. Tiny homes are often located on land surrounded by nature. Therefore tiny home owners tend to be more engaged in their surroundings.

Tiny homes are also solutions for disaster relief and housing crises. For example in West Virginia, USA, after heavy floods destroyed thousands of houses in June 2017, tiny houses were built to re-home the residents. In Malden, one of the places in the Netherlands where people deal with a lack in housing, tiny houses were built to start solving the housing crises and especially to help young people to live in an affordable home. Building tiny homes can bring solutions to societal problems and therefore it’s much more than just living simply.

New perspectives on life

Reading about tiny houses and their owners I have discovered it’s also more than only living in a small space. In these times of massive and often destructive consumption it evokes questions as, how many things do I need to live comfortably? Do I really need a mortgage and two cars? What makes me happy? How can I live more environmentally friendly and lead a more sustainable life? It questions the traditional life of big houses, mortgages and the obligation to work to pay for all of this.

In short, living in a tiny house isn’t only more financially sustainable than a traditional home as we don’t have mortgages anymore, but it also brings new perspectives on life. A tiny house provides the opportunity to answer the desire to downsize and be more ecologically and economically conscious. To me, it’s a way to simplify life in a chaotic world where we all have to do and we all have to be so much.

Time becomes a new best friend: time to do projects we desire, time to be together with the people we love and time to be more connected with nature.

Google shows 934 million articles and videos related to “tiny house”. Tiny homes are “hot”! Often cleverly constructed with green living principles and incredible creativity, off grid tiny houses illustrate sustainable living at its best.

One of my favorites of the “Living Big in a Tiny House” series is the story of Frenchy and her gypsy caravan:

This week’s blogpost is an adjusted version of my published article on Elephant Journal (Grassroots section):

https://www.elephantjournal.com/2019/05/less-is-more-why-tiny-house-life-is-the-future/

Con Amor,

Eva

2 comments

  1. Last September I bought a 38-year-old Mercedes Sprinter Campervan to convert into my tiny home on wheels. It took two years of thinking about and 3 months of renovation to make it a reality. I did it for all the reasons you do articulately put across in your article. It was a lifestyle choice. I wanted to reduce my impact on the planet while creating more freedom in my life. You inspire me to tell that story. Thank you for sharing your personal story and for including your interesting research. I look forward to learning more about your journey. 🙏🏻

    Liked by 1 person

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