How to Build a ‘Temporary’ Microhouse

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Building your own microhouse isn't as difficult as you might think.
Building your own microhouse isn't as difficult as you might think.
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A close up look at a modern stick-built 2-bys nailed together.
A close up look at a modern stick-built 2-bys nailed together.
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A temporary timber-frame with mortise and tenon joints.
A temporary timber-frame with mortise and tenon joints.
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Thoreau's timber frame with pegged, hand-hewn logs.
Thoreau's timber frame with pegged, hand-hewn logs.
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A comprehensive look at some of the detail of microhouse construction.
A comprehensive look at some of the detail of microhouse construction.
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Here is an example of fastening pieced timbers from 2-bys.
Here is an example of fastening pieced timbers from 2-bys.

The foundations of the first true American microhouse–and of the philosophy that changed society’s attitude toward personal freedom and man’s relationship with Nature–were laid “near the end of March, 1845,” when Henry David Thoreau, a Harvard dropout from Concord, Massachusetts, borrowed an ax, walked a mile and a half to Walden Pond, and began to build a ten-by-fifteen-foot one-room cabin of hand-hewn logs and recycled shanty boards fastened with salvaged nails and wooden pegs. In an era when a laborer earned a dollar a day, his total cash outlay for the house came to $28.12. He lived there for more than two years and from the experience wrote a book called Walden, which changed my life and the lives of many others. It can change yours as well.

In the balance of this article, we’ll suggest how you can live like Thoreau and create your own Walden by designing and building your own rustic microhouse. Perhaps you’ll just want to dream about doing so.  Be sure to check out the image gallery along the way to see some helpful illustrations.

Even in the backyard of a town or suburban home, a microhouse exempt from building codes can be built as a moveable tool shed. Arrange the front to face the garden or perhaps a little fishpond; screen its open sides with fast-growing shrubs and vines. Fitted with a portable chemical toilet behind a folding screen in one comer, water from a hose, and electricity from a long outdoor extension cord plugged in at the house, it can provide a rustic backyard retreat for anyone who needs some private quiet time in a natural setting.

In a more rural locale, where city zoning rules and building codes won’t interfere, a more firmly rooted version with a detached privy and a grey water drywell to dispose of cooking and wash water can serve as a place of their own for grandmother or an adult child who has come to live with you. Farther afield still, it can serve as a low-cost, low-impact second home in the woods or mountains or on a lake. It can be a place to camp while you build your full-size log cabin; then you can convert the microhouse into an in-law’s or older teenager’s apartment, a small barn, stable, or hen house.

It can be the ultimate retreat on a slow-moving Southern catfish and craw-dad creek to host a sun-warmed retirement that will remain affordable no matter what might happen to Social Security or the Dow Jones average.

  • Published on Jun 1, 1998
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