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Here's what a $39-a-night Airbnb in New York City looks like

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taxi

New York City, in all its glory, isn't cheap.

If you're visiting just for the night, expect to drop over $260 on a hotel room. You might find a better deal through Airbnb, where the average nightly rate is $149.

Alternatively, you can sleep in a converted taxi cab for $39 ($50 after the cleaning and service fees).

One Airbnb host has converted vans, campers, and iconic New York City taxis into 'rolling rooms' for all of the budget travelers out there.

What is it actually like to stay overnight in a yellow cab?

I ditched my overpriced Manhattan apartment for two nights and tried it out. Here's what it was like:

SEE ALSO: After sleeping in a converted NYC taxi, I have a new respect for the young professionals living in vans to save money

Knowing it would be a tiny space, I wanted to pack lightly, yet still cover all of the essentials to make it a comfortable stay. Among the things that made the cut were: work clothes, a few toiletries, two washcloths, an extra blanket, portable speakers, a laptop, a book, and melatonin to help me sleep.



Two last-minute additions — toilet paper and hand sanitizer — were game-changers. We (I brought my roommate along) also bought two bottles of water on the way, which we figured we would use to brush our teeth and wash our faces.



We made the easy commute from Manhattan to Long Island City, Queens, where we found our home for the next two nights parked on this dead-end street.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

I spent 2 nights sleeping in a converted taxi and the hardest part had nothing to do with the lack of space

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With rent reaching astronomical levels across the US, more and more professionals are trading in overpriced apartments for vans, campers, and even sailboats.

In fact, there's a whole community of tech workers who trade tips about living in vans on Reddit.

It looks brilliant on paper — some van dwellers are saving up to 90% of their income— but I wanted to know what it's really like to make a lifestyle change of this magnitude. So I moved into a van. Specifically, a taxicab converted into a "rolling room," which I found on Airbnb for $50 a night ($39 plus the cleaning and service fees).

I only spent two nights "living tiny" before happily moving back into my egregiously priced Manhattan apartment — but two nights was more than enough to realize I'm not cut out for van life.

Surprisingly, the hardest part had nothing to do with the space (or lack thereof). It was planning ahead.

Proper preparation takes more time and effort than I was ready for. Once again, I only did this for two days (not a tall task!) but was shocked with the level of preparation required even for just 48 hours.

I typically never worry about my phone battery or stress about the availability of a bathroom because outlets and restrooms are always at my fingertips. Living off the grid in a van forced me to think ahead at least 24 hours. I found myself asking questions I rarely ask on a day-to-day basis: Does my phone have enough battery to last the night? When is the next time I'll have access to a bathroom? How early should I set my alarm to have enough time to commute home and shower before work?

In addition to planning for these little things that are typically a given, you have to plan ways to fill time. After night one, I realized that in order for this lifestyle to work (at least, for me) I'd want to spend as little time as possible in the van, using it exclusively to sleep. My initial thought is that this would be easier said than done — sure, it was easy to kill time for one night, but I imagine planning activities to fill each night would take quite a bit of time and effort.

I won't be joining the van-dwelling community anytime soon ... but major kudos to those who are making it work.

SEE ALSO: Here's what a $39-a-night Airbnb in New York City looks like

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Chick-fil-A is giving out free sandwiches — here's how to get one

Meet the pro baseball player who scored a $2 million signing bonus and lives in a van he bought for $10,000

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daniel norris

MLB pitcher Daniel Norris has always marched to the beat of his own drum.

The 23-year-old lefty was baptized in his baseball uniform; he has never tasted alcohol or tried drugs; and the first thing he bought with his $2 million pro baseball signing bonus was a $14 T-shirt.

He also chooses to live in a Volkswagen camper during the offseason. Read on to meet the pitcher, cancer survivor, outdoors enthusiast, and self-proclaimed nonconformist:

SEE ALSO: An MLB pitcher who scored a $2 million signing bonus chose to live in a van in a Walmart parking lot

Norris, the youngest of three, grew up in the mountains of Johnson City, Tennessee. 'My parents hadn't raised a boy before,' he wrote in the Players' Tribune. 'So when I was about two years old, they were like, I guess we'll put him in ... sports?'

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Source: The Players' Tribune



He excelled at football and basketball in high school, but baseball — particularly pitching — suited his personality most. As he told ESPN, 'it can get quiet and lonely out there when you're pitching, which drives some people crazy. But that's my favorite part.'

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Norris, right, as a sophomore in high school.

Source: ESPN



Much of Norris' lifestyle was influenced by his father (pictured), who owned a bike shop in Johnson City and raised his kids to embrace the outdoors and live simply. 'We would always go mountain biking or on family bike rides,' Norris wrote in the Tribune. 'We were always outside. So my love for the outdoors comes from how and where I was raised.'

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Source: The Players' Tribune



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Why a professional baseball player who scored a $2 million signing bonus lives in a van during the off-season

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After being drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays in 2011, Daniel Norris' bank-account balance had more zeroes tacked on the end than he'd ever seen.

The 18-year-old, straight out of high school, had scored a $2 million signing bonus, making him a millionaire overnight.

Yet Norris — who has always lived by his own code — refused to change his lifestyle simply because of a raise.

In fact, one of the first things he bought was a $10,000 Volkswagen camper ... which he converted into a tiny house and lives and travels in during the off-season.

Why camp out in a van and live off of a scant $800 a month, despite all of the zeroes tacked on his bank account balance?

His childhood hints at the answer. He was raised in Johnson City, Tennessee, and taught to embrace the outdoors and live simply.

"I grew up with a simple lifestyle, and I knew going into professional baseball that would be tested," he told GrindTV. "In my mind there's no need for luxury, or at least society's sense of the word."

daniel norris

Norris is the first to admit that he's "more comfortable being kind of poor."

In fact, he spends only about $800 a month and directs the rest of his money into conservative investments.

"Just because money is there doesn't mean you have to have nicer things than you used to have,"he told ESPN.

Additionally, hitting the road in his van — which he calls "Shaggy"— keeps him busy once baseball is over for the year.

"If there's no baseball, I need to keep myself occupied or I'll go crazy,"he wrote in The Players' Tribune. "It keeps me grounded and allows me to recharge."

As for whether the van life takes away from focusing on baseball, Norris doesn't think so.

"It might be a little unconventional, but that's the only way I'm going to come back to spring training and have a great season,"he wrote. "I need to start out happy and balanced. With things in perspective."

SEE ALSO: Meet the pro baseball player who scored a $2 million signing bonus and lives in a van he bought for $10,000

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Fed's Bullard gave us a great baseball analogy to explain what the Fed is doing wrong

These tiny homes cost £52,000 and can be built in just 3 days

This couple lived in an RV in Google's parking lot for 2 years and saved 80% of their income

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One Google employee brings new meaning to the term "company man": For nearly two years, he and his wife lived in a small RV in the parking lot of the tech giant's Mountain View, California, headquarters.

They're not the only people to live on the company's campus— which is known for perks like free meals and fitness classes — and they claim to be the longest-running residents of the lot.

Pete, 33, will have been at Google for five years this April. He started as a temp and now works as a program manager for the research-and-development team. Nearly two of those five years, from January 2012 to October 2013, were spent living in the Google parking lot with his wife, Kara, 28.

They had no electricity or water during their parking-lot stint. It was basically "glorified camping,"Kara described on their blog, "Pete and Kara Living," but it allowed them to save 80% of their take-home pay, despite living in the notoriously pricey Bay Area.

Today their "mini Winnie" is still alive and kicking, but now it's parked in the driveway of their home, which they bought with their sizable savings in the summer of 2013.

Business Insider talked to the couple about their unique experience and their transition to traditional home ownership.

SEE ALSO: A 23-year-old Google employee lives in a truck in the company's parking lot and saves 90% of his income

The couple purchased their 21-foot 1985 Winnebago Lesharo in September 2010. At the time, they were based in Chicago, where Pete was finishing up a summer contract with the Chicago Park District and Kara was teaching at a Montessori school.

They found the lightly used Winnebago Lesharo for sale in Warrenville, Illinois, Kara wrote on their blog. "We went to see it, took it for a test drive, and made him an offer. It was ours for $1,900, about half of what we originally expected to pay."

Shortly after, they quit their jobs, sold all of their belongings, and moved to Pete's parents' home in Attica, Michigan, to prepare the Winnebago before setting out on the next chapter of their lives: living as full-time RV residents in Austin, Texas.



They kept renovations cheap — under $100 — which consisted of ripping out the back passenger seats to build a twin bed with storage underneath and installing "a peel-and-stick wood-looking floor," Pete tells Business Insider.

While renovations cost next to nothing, repairs ultimately became one of their biggest expenses. Pete estimates that over time, they've put $10,000 into the RV, mainly for repairs.

Measuring a little less than 100 square feet, the Winnebago came with a small kitchen area with a propane stove top and sink, a kitchen table surrounded by two booths, and enough storage to accommodate their two bikes, clothes, and spare parts for the RV. It also had a shower and toilet, which they didn't use often.



After finishing preparations, they left for Austin in early December 2010. They set up camp in an RV park and started looking for work. "There was quite a bit of uncertainty at this time because we had no jobs and only $10,000," Pete tells Business Insider.

Four months later and in the nick of time, Pete got a call about a temp position at Google. "We were on our last $50, shopping at Walmart for rice and beans," Pete remembers. "There was some legitimate fear and uncertainty at that time and we were a few weeks — if not days — from losing everything."

The call turned into a job, which he started right away in April 2011. He worked remotely until January 2012, at which point Pete, Kara, and their Winnebago left Austin and headed west to Google's headquarters.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

This couple travels the US in a tiny home they built for under $20,000 — take a look inside

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Alexis Stephens and Christian Parsons are a "go big or go home" kind of couple. When Alexis wanted to simplify her life and her surroundings in 2015, they removed the clutter, stashed their old photographs and Christmas decorations in a storage unit, and built the tiny home of their dreams.

Now, the couple is traveling the country making a documentary about tiny home owners finding community — in places big and small. They were kind enough to share some snapshots of the journey with us.

SEE ALSO: 3 months ago I threw everything away — and it's taught me surprising lessons about minimalism

"I’m a recovered pack rat," Alexis says. "For me, I wanted to make a lifestyle decision to simplify my surroundings."



The tiny house presented the perfect solution. About a year ago, her partner Christian broke ground on the home of their dreams.



Christian was no stranger to renovations. His dad worked on every house the family lived in for "almost the entire time we lived in it."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

This egg-shaped pod lets you have high tech living off the grid


8 beautiful micro-homes that re-think traditional living spaces

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If you're looking to scale down, a tiny house could be your next dream home.

An increasing number of start-ups are creating designs for micro-homes, which they claim re-think traditional living spaces.

There are numerous benefits to living in tiny houses — they're easy to manage and have a small energy footprint. The limited square footage also encourages residents to keep only the possessions that bring them joy, à la Marie Kondo.

Here are eight manufacturers making immaculately designed tiny homes that measure under 500 square feet.

SEE ALSO: Here's another sign that Amazon is betting big on Alexa, its smart personal assistant

Wooden tiny homes on wheels.

In 2014, Tumbleweed Housing Company debuted its Cypress House, which ranges from 130 to 172 square feet.

Complete with wood paneling and wheels, the homes feature two beds (one lofted), a kitchen, a bathroom, and a washer and dryer.

The Colorado-based startup sells them for $58,000 to $70,000, depending on the amenities and size.



Prefabricated tiny homes that you can design with an app.

In April 2016, Blu Homes, a California-based prefab home manufacturer, launched a line of micro-houses that customers can customize on an app.

The tiny homes start at $250,000, and owners can pick the layout, materials, colors, and appliances to match their taste.

When someone orders one, Blu Homes will assemble it in a factory near the Bay Area — the area that's perhaps the biggest incubator of America's tiny home movement — and deliver it.



Micro-cottages in Georgia.

A team of architecture students at Auburn University designed a pair of tiny homes that each cost less than $20,000 to build.

The cottages are part of a pilot project to produce beautiful micro-homes at low production costs. They're located at Serenbe, a community of nearly 500 people in northwest Georgia.

The 500-square-homes have design elements that make them feel larger than they actually are, like deep window sills that bounce natural light and promote ventilation. They're also fully-furnished and feature a living room, bedroom, and full kitchen.

Currently, the houses are being used for artist residencies at Serenbe.

 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

These affordable tiny homes are made out of shipping containers

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The next generation of the tiny house is the live-in shipping container.

Imagine stepping through the front door of a crate that once shepherded supplies across oceans and entering a pint-sized home that looks like something out a Pottery Barn catalog.

That's the vision of Montainer, a Missoula, Montana-based startup that wants to make it easier to become a homeowner. Their revamped shipping containers start at $55,000, and the company handles all the permits needed to make your dream home a reality.

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Patrick Collins, CEO of Montainer, tells Tech Insider that the company currently installs the shipping containers as secondary dwelling units in homeowners' backyards, which means they share a property with a "real house." That's a much easier process than acquiring a bona fide tiny house.

To get started, a buyer must log onto Montainer's website and place a “no commitment” reservation deposit of $2,500. A member from the company's design team reaches out and works with the buyer to create a blueprint based on their needs and customizations.

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Meanwhile, Montainer starts acquiring building permits from the city's development board. Collins says the fact that the shipping containers are sold as secondary dwelling units gives the builders some flexibility in the design.

"The tiny house movement is really about doing it yourself and being off-grid — trying to do things as cheaply as possible," Collins says. "Our customer ... they basically don't have to do anything."

Montainer gives the prospective buyer an estimated cost, and then they can decide whether or not to move forward. If they can't secure permits or funding, the deposit is returned.

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All the shipping containers are built on the company's headquarters in Montana. They come in all shapes and sizes, and can even be stacked and adjoined to form larger configurations.

Collins says the first units have started to ship to early-bird buyers, and the company is now opening up sales to other homeowners. Eventually, once building codes from coast to coast catch up with the tiny house phenomenon, he hopes to make the shipping containers available to a wider audience.

"Ultimately, our mission is to make home-ownership attainable for anyone," Collins says.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Silicon Valley's most creative designer has the perfect solution for tiny apartments

Don't move to any of these 13 cities if you want a big starter home

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You've heard of tiny houses, the small homes, sometimes on wheels, whose occupants have to creatively build to live comfortably.

Most first-time homebuyers aren't looking for a tiny home when they first set out, but buyers in the following cities may end up with one anyway.

Trulia.com gathered a list of the cities with the smallest starter homes. These cities are spread across the US, and even though size isn't everything, it is nice to have a bit of elbow room.

13. Denver

Median Starter Home Size: 1,056 sq ft

Median Premium Home Size: 2,318 sq ft

Average Home Size: 1,941 sq ft

Data provided by Trulia



12. Minneapolis

Median Starter Home Size: 1,053 sq ft

Median Premium Home Size: 1,920 sq ft

Average Home Size: 1,588 sq ft

Data provided by Trulia



11. Salt Lake City

Median Starter Home Size: 1,052 sq ft

Median Premium Home Size: 1,962 sq ft

Average Home Size: 1,663 sq ft

Data provided by Trulia



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

23 incredible tiny homes from around the world

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Small spaces are the next big thing in real estate, and with good reason. 

Real estate is constantly getting more expensive, and we're facing overpopulation and environmental damage. Tiny homes can help solve these issues, but many also prefer them to traditional housing because they're the perfect hybrid of comfort and convenience, since they are often mobile.

On roofs, wheels, and in backyard, here are 23 of the smallest homes we could find around the world.

Melissa Stanger contributed to an earlier version of this story.

A Colorado couple built this 124 square-foot home that has a kitchen, bathroom and sleeping loft.

Size: 124 sq. ft.

Location: Colorado

Colorado couple Christopher Smith and Merete Mueller began building their home back in 2011 and documented the journey in a new movie called "TINY: A Story About Living Small."

The house has a small galley kitchen, a bathroom, and a sleeping loft nestled between the floor and the 11-foot-high ceilings. For storage, the couple makes use of a small closet and two built-in bookshelves, and works from a built-in desk a reclaimed hardwood table.



KODA Walking Concrete made the World Architecture Festival's shortlist of the best "Small Projects" in 2016.

Size: 250 sq. ft

Location: Tallinn, Estonia 

This cubic concrete home is completely mobile and has technology that allows it to learn and adjust to its surroundings. The company that developed it,  Kodasema, designed the two-tiered home so that it can be assembled in as little as four hours.

The simple design allows it to function as whatever space is needed, be it a beach house, mountain hut, café, or office. 

 



This 196 square-foot home cost its architect less than $12,000 to build.

Size: 196 sq. ft.

Location: Boise, Idaho

Boise architect Macy Miller decided to downgrade from a full-size home to a tiny one, which she designed and built herself. She lives there with her partner and dog.

The home, which sits on top of a flatbed trailer, cost about $11,500 all in. The most expensive component is the composting toilet — about $2,000 — which uses barely any water.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The popularity of tiny houses is beginning to have a big impact on the real estate market

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It’s no secret that the counter-movement to big, sprawling homes has reached the mainstream – and it's known as the tiny home.

Tiny houses are exactly as they’re described: small homes that are often built on a trailer to be portable. The maximum square footage for tiny living varies by the company or individual, but these small dwellings are typically under 500 to 700 square feet. Tiny homes are often designed to meet function first – whether it's a loft bed or composting toilet – and can cost less than $10,000 and up to $100,000, depending on the size, style and functionality of the space.

Interest in tiny homes gained momentum during the recession that began in 2007, as people sought a simpler, less expensive way to live. And as the U.S. pulled itself out of economic crisis, the desire for simple living didn’t wane.

What started as a very small community that prefers to live in stylized small square footage has grown to be widely recognized as a movement to combat the growing size of traditional homes.

“I still consider it, frankly, a fringe movement, in the best possible way … but I think we just really hit a tipping point where it went into general public awareness,” says Ryan Mitchell, creator of the tiny houses and simple-living blog The Tiny Life.

[See: 9 Alternative Building Materials to Consider for Your Home .]

Today, even if people aren’t necessarily planning to live tiny, many are interested in the option, watching others make the move to small spaces on shows like “Tiny House Hunters,” “Tiny House Nation” and “Tiny House, Big Living” on HGTV.

Dan Louche, founder of Tiny Home Builders, a DeLand, Florida-based company started in 2009 to design and build portable tiny homes, says the network attention that largely began in 2014 brought the previously small community to the forefront, expanding the niche industry with a larger customer base and making it more recognized by other parts of the real estate industry, from appliances that fit the tiny lifestyle to insurance on smaller dwellings.

“Things have gotten easier because everybody knows about tiny houses, so now there’s a lot more companies trying to jump on that bandwagon – and not just tiny-house companies, but traditional financing like SunTrust and insurance companies,” Louche says.

While the added attention and greater industry involvement has made many aspects of tiny homebuilding and tiny living easier, it’s still an alternative way of living compared with traditional homes or renting an apartment.

Near Seattle, real estate broker Matt Parker, with Keller Williams Realty Puget Sound, says many of his homebuyer clients are now hoping to find a space that is smaller and more designed to maximize functionality than the large floor plans common among homes built in the last 30 years. But zoning requirements and lending for new construction are structured to favor bigger construction since it brings better returns.

“The demand is there [for tiny homes] … but the product is not there,” Parker says.

To meet homebuyers' changing desires, Parker says it will likely take a significant shift in the real estate industry and some careful planning. He sees tiny homes as a much more affordable option for living (he is even hoping to build one for him and his wife), but zoning and lot sizes better suited to tiny homes would need construction and zoning requirements to ensure the structure built on the property is an improvement on the land, which requires the homeowner to make a more significant investment in the building materials and design.

“It’s almost like you have to adopt Santa Barbara [California] aesthetic restrictions and city lot sizes, and some mix of those would lead to a beautiful future, in my opinion. You want people spending money on these still – you don’t want people just cheaping out,” Parker says, pointing to Santa Barbara's ordinances and guidelines that encourage neighborhood compatibility, consistent design and quality craftsmanship for single-family homes.

[See: 10 Ways to Save Energy and Reduce Utility Bills at Home .]

Even with tiny living's growing popularity, Parker, Mitchell and Louche all stress that the lifestyle isn’t right for everyone. Before you sell all your belongings that don’t fit in 100 square feet, ask yourself these questions:

SEE ALSO: I stayed in a tiny house, and it made me want to throw out everything I own

Are you ready for less? If you feel like you’ve got more square footage than you can handle, it may be time to look tinier. “Most people don’t think about approaching housing differently. … There are other options,” Mitchell says.

But before you start building that tiny house that will restore simplicity, consider the things you can’t physically downsize. If you have a large family that isn’t excited about living that close, pets that need more space than a tiny home allows or a job that requires you to be in a city where a place to keep your small house is hard to find, maybe the lifestyle isn’t right for you just yet.



Do you have the financial means? A tiny home certainly costs less than a traditional home, but it’s still more than many people have on hand. While some lenders have started issuing tiny house loans, including online lenders Backed and SunTrust, it’s not a part of the standard mortgage industry yet.

“We’re outsiders. They’ll give us a loan to build this McMansion, but we don’t want to do that,” Parker says. “That pathway is not grooved in the mortgage industry right now,” he adds.



Can you commit? It’s not just a matter of being able to downsize to a trailer’s worth of belongings. Living in such a small space requires a commitment to simplifying your entire lifestyle. Otherwise, Mitchell says you can find yourself going back to a traditional home all too quickly.

“It’s really doing the deeper work with yourself, that kind of introspectiveness that is setting the stage to live in a tiny house. Because if you don’t do that work, you’re going to be miserable,” Mitchell says.

[See: 10 Ways Millennials Are Changing Homebuying .]



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

9 surprisingly beautiful tiny homes you can buy right now

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Your next home-away-from-home may come in under 500 square feet.

The market for vacation properties reached an all-time high in 2015 and shows no signs of slowing down. If you don't want to go for a typical house, tiny homes offer a low-maintenance and environmentally friendly way to expand a real estate portfolio on any budget.

We teamed up with the experts at property listing site Estately to find nine tiny homes you can buy right now. From a mini-houseboat to a log cabin, any one of these could be yours.

SEE ALSO: 16 architecturally stunning homes you can buy right now

This delightful cottage hugs the Massachusetts coastline. It includes new wood floors, stone countertops, and a roof deck perfect for soaking up the sun.

Address:423 Commercial St., Provincetown, MA

Price: $1.2 million



This rustic artist's retreat sits on nine acres of California hills where the previous owners cultivated Japanese Maple trees. It includes a workshop and two offices.

Address:3885 Cavedale Rd., Glen Ellen, CA

Price: $1.2 million



Who says a tiny house has to be on land? This houseboat situated in northern Idaho spares no amenities. It has a full kitchen and two and half baths.

Address:34179 N Scenic Bay, Bayview, ID

Price: $80,000



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Inside the Las Vegas trailer park that Zappos' multimillionaire CEO calls home

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Tony Hsieh has a net worth of $840 million, but rather than scoop up a desert mansion outside the Zappos campus in Las Vegas, Nevada, he's planted his roots in a trailer park downtown.

In 2014, as part of his grand efforts to revitalize the city, Hsieh transformed an abandoned parking lot into a micro-living oasis. About 30 Airstream trailers and tiny homes make up the village commonly known as "Llamapolis."

Let's take a peek inside.

SEE ALSO: 9 surprisingly beautiful tiny homes you can buy right now

The entrance to Llamapolis is a semicircle tunnel covered in recycled Christmas lights.

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The smell of livestock washes over you upon entry, and it becomes immediately clear how the village got its nickname, Llamapolis.

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Marley and Triton, who are actually alpacas, live here with their owner and the CEO of Zappos, Tony Hsieh.

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See the rest of the story at Business Insider

4 ingenious designs for tiny homes of the future

Here's what a $39-a-night Airbnb in New York City looks like

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New York City, in all its glory, isn't cheap.

If you're visiting just for the night, expect to drop over $260 on a hotel room. You might find a better deal through Airbnb, where the average nightly rate is $149.

Alternatively, you can sleep in a converted taxi cab for $39 ($50 after the cleaning and service fees).

One Airbnb host has converted vans, campers, and iconic New York City taxis into 'rolling rooms' for all of the budget travelers out there.

What is it actually like to stay overnight in a yellow cab?

I ditched my overpriced Manhattan apartment for two nights and tried it out. Here's what it was like:

SEE ALSO: After sleeping in a converted NYC taxi, I have a new respect for the young professionals living in vans to save money

Knowing it would be a tiny space, I wanted to pack lightly, yet still cover all of the essentials to make it a comfortable stay. Among the things that made the cut were: work clothes, a few toiletries, two washcloths, an extra blanket, portable speakers, a laptop, a book, and melatonin to help me sleep.



Two last-minute additions — toilet paper and hand sanitizer — were game-changers. We (I brought my roommate along) also bought two bottles of water on the way, which we figured we would use to brush our teeth and wash our faces.



We made the easy commute from Manhattan to Long Island City, Queens, where we found our home for the next two nights parked on this dead-end street.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

One of the biggest cities in the US wants to put homeless people in tiny houses

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More than 4,000 people are homeless in San Jose, California. The 10th largest city in the US has long run out of beds to keep them sheltered.

A new law will make the city, located an hour's drive south of San Francisco, the first in the state to legally permit construction of tiny homes for the homeless, the San Jose Mercury News reports.

Starting in January, the city will temporarily make an exception to state building, safety, and health codes and build houses so small, they wouldn't ordinarily be approved for construction. The new residences will measure 70 square feet for individuals and 120 square feet for couples. It's still unknown how many people the program will accommodate.

Cute as they may be, tiny houses are often illegal.

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Many US city and county governments (including San Jose prior to this new law)do not authorize residences under a certain square footage. Development codes have requirements related to plumbing, utilities, and building foundations that such unconventional dwellings don't meet.

That's unfortunate, because tiny homes offer a creative solution to the homelessness crisis. Tiny homes cost between $200 and $400 per square foot, depending on the materials used and their extravagance, according to Forbes, while the median list price in San Jose is $515 per square foot. Earlier this year, the city became the first in the US where the average home costs over $1 million.

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In San Jose, where many of the city's homeless stay in camps along trails, creeks, and rivers, something had to give. The city declared a "shelter crisis" back in December for the purpose of building homes that skirt existing development codes, according to the Mercury News.

"This law really is the first of its kind,"Ray Bramson, San Jose's homeless response manager, tells the Mercury News. "It will allow us to create bridge housing opportunities — a stable place people can live and stay while they're waiting to be placed in a permanent home."

San Jose isn't the first city to build tiny houses for the homeless. A number of cities, including Austin, Texas; Detroit, Michigan; and Portland, Oregon, have experimented with "tiny villages" for the homeless. Residents of these villages speaking to the media describe a sense of pride in their communities.

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In Austin, the creator of one such village estimates it will save taxpayers up to $3 million annually that's normally spent on medical bills and criminal justice expenses for the homeless.

San Jose plans to hold a competition where people can submit designs for the new homes. Cost effectiveness and the ability to duplicate homes easily are two major criteria, according to Bramson. The future locations of the tiny homes is still to be determined.

The law that temporarily allows their construction in San Jose will be suspended in 2022, when the city will evaluate the program's impact.

Should it prove successful, other cities in California might look to San Jose to see how it's done.

SEE ALSO: A former San Francisco mayor wants to put the city's homeless on a Navy ship

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NOW WATCH: These Harvard-designed tiny homes are the future of weekend getaways

This couple couldn't afford to live in San Francisco, so they're building tiny homes made from shipping containers

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In 2014, Heather Stewart and Luke Iseman could no longer justify spending $2,200 a month on rent in San Francisco. Fed up with the housing market, they bought a shipping container online for $2,300, had it delivered to a vacant parking lot in the East Bay they leased, and converted it into a tiny house.

Their new home contained all the creature comforts of home in a 160-square-foot space, and cost next to nothing in utilities and maintenance. 

Today, Stewart and Iseman have moved out of their original tiny home and act as the pseudo-landlords of Boxouse, a maker space where amateur builders and hobbyists can construct the tiny homes of their dreams. The couple also converts shipping containers into living spaces for outside buyers on the side.

They're currently working on two new containers that will form their next home, living in the under-construction tiny homes in the warehouse while they do it. Let's take a look inside.

Heather Stewart grew up running horse farms in almost every corner of the US. As an adult, she realized she still didn't know how to build anything.



"I was interested in alternative housing," Stewart says. "I don't want to be in debt for the next 60 years, and I also don't want to be in one place for the next 60 years."

 



When she saw the shipping container turned home her now partner, Luke Iseman, built five years ago, she knew she wanted one of her own.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

11 people who have gone to unbelievable lengths to save money

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From making 713-mile commutes overseas to secretly living out of vans, people do crazy things to save money.

We aren't recommending you do the same (there are plenty of other, less extreme, tactics to save money) ... unless you're ready for a lifestyle change of the biggest kind.

Read on to see some of the more creative ways people all over the world have found to live on the cheap.

SEE ALSO: 8 refreshing insights about money and happiness from people who 'live tiny'

A Google employee lives in a truck in the company parking lot and saves 90% of his income

Google employee Brandon (who asked to withhold his last name) lives in a 128-square-foot truck in the company parking lot. The 23-year-old software engineer's one recurring cost is truck insurance for $121 a month — and he's saving 90% of his income by avoiding an overpriced San Francisco apartment.

He's used the savings to pay down student loans, get a head start on investing, and set aside money for his goal of traveling the world in a few years.

You can follow the live-updating "savings clock" he created on his blog to see exactly how much he's saving.

Read more about Brandon.



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One couple took on a fixer-upper home with the mind-boggling price tag of just $13,000

Paying off a mortgage can be a long and stressful process, so Justin Craig, 35, and Alia Polsgrove, 33, decided to forgo it altogether by purchasing a 103-year-old fixer-upper in cash and renovating it.

They're doing most of the renovations to the Detroit home themselves, which is saving them about $66,000, and they expect the finished product to cost a total of $120,000.

In a couple of years, they could be sitting on a nice profit margin — currently, homes on their block are listed around $215,000, and Craig predicts they'll start selling for $300,000 in another three years.

Read more about Justin and Alia.



A Los Angeles man spent 500 days secretly living in his office and saved over $20,000

In the summer of 2012, "Terry K." (the pseudonym of the writer who tells his story on Salon) rented out his Venice Beach, California apartment and moved into his office.

He used his cubicle as a bedroom for over a year, which saved him more than $20,000 and freed up the time and money to travel and pursue his interests. Today he lives in a slightly more traditional setting: a tiny home attached to his truck.

Read more about Terry K.



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