The L41: A Tiny, Energy-Efficient Prefab Home

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The L41 home lives large with tons of built-in storage and dual-function designs.
The L41 home lives large with tons of built-in storage and dual-function designs.
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A full-size kitchen is key to making the L41 feel like a larger home.
A full-size kitchen is key to making the L41 feel like a larger home.

Though his homes are small, Michael Katz’s goals are big. “The major objective of the L41 home is to play a part in mass-producing houses that are so affordable that, before the end of this century, all the people in the world can have proper shelter,” says the Vancouver, British Columbia-based architect. “Affordability, mass production, quality, high design and sustainability is the L41 home manifesto.”

Katz uses assembly-line technology to create delightful, energy-efficient homes that most prospective homeowners can afford. Based on a 220-square-foot studio module, the expandable, stackable units are also available as a 290-square-foot one-bedroom unit or a 360-square-foot two-bedroom unit, and can stand alone or be stacked and combined into almost limitless combinations for multi- family dwellings. Artist Janet Corne co-designed the homes with Katz to ensure a design that’s “delightful, livable, even downright luxurious,” Katz says.

Katz plans to have the units on the market this summer. Though prices are being finalized, he says studio models will cost less than $60,000.

Learn more: katzarchitecture.com

The Good Stuff

  • Published on Jan 31, 2011
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