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interesting little buildings

Theo R Cwithin

I cast "Baconstorm!"
Here are a couple unusual and very small buildings that have popped up on my recent traversals of teh int3rwebz. Any other tiny architectural curiosities out there?



In Sweden, an invisible tree hotel (yahoo article , hotel site (lots of flash), and the architects' site):

mirrored-treehuouse.jpg



A strawbale "hobbit hole" in Wales:

front.jpg



FWIW, I've been slowly ramping up to buy some land and build a (fairly primitive) little homestead on it, hence the interest in the little buildings.

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(And, no I'm not going to build an invisible treehouse.)

(Probably.)

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Those look cool! I like the "hobbit hole"!
Yeah... my jaw dropped when I saw that one, too! And reading their website is really interesting, as well, if a little short on specifics. Best part is that it's not even expensive (well, for a house done fairly primitively), nor is it difficult to do.

I'm seriously thinking about doing something along those lines as a little retreat.


Aeolius said:
{.. pics ..}
Aha! I'd forgotten about those spherical tree-houses. They're a really neat idea, and look interesting, like huge fruit of some sort... though as a living space a sphere seems awkward to me (at least on a world with gravity ;) ).

Treehouses rock. Here's another I like built by a pro, Takeshi Kobayashi. He does a lot more avant garde stuff, too.



The caboose is neat, as well. I've known a handful of people who have converted old schoolbuses into mobilehomes on the cheap. It's amazing what some people pull off with a little veneer flooring, curtains and pvc pipe. For a more old-school feel, I kind of like tiny wheeled houses, like the old "Shepherds' huts" of the UK.



Or, of course, yurts:

kyrgyzYurt3.jpg
 

Yeah... my jaw dropped when I saw that one, too! And reading their website is really interesting, as well, if a little short on specifics. Best part is that it's not even expensive (well, for a house done fairly primitively), nor is it difficult to do.

I'm seriously thinking about doing something along those lines as a little retreat.

The site was interesting. I think it would make a great retreat and as you said, not super expensive to do so and blends right in with the surroundings. I wish I had more access to some naturally occurring hills, but alas stuck in the midwestern flatlands for the moment!

Here is a wigwam motel in Mammoth Cave, Kentucky. I think the same folks did a couple other of these in the US as well.

teepees.jpg
 

The site was interesting. I think it would make a great retreat and as you said, not super expensive to do so and blends right in with the surroundings. I wish I had more access to some naturally occurring hills, but alas stuck in the midwestern flatlands for the moment!
Yes, hills make burrowing a lot easier. Right now I'm looking into n. Arkansas or Missouri, for the Ozarks hills and forest. I don't yet know if a "hobbit hole" is really suitable for that climate/terrain, but that's the kind of stuff I'm trying to find out.

Meanwhile, I feel your pain. I'm in the Texas panhandle now, so it's just flat and dusty. A couple options for flatlands:

Geodesic domes- They're easy to build, and they're a natural choice for gamers. Paint a big 20 on top to complete "the natural 20 look":

easydomes2.jpg



Sandbag structures- ridiculously cheap and easy:

1-earthbag-dome-home-450x346.jpg


And whatever this is (I think it's the top of a water tower?)

86879042_11bb976d9a.jpg


(Unfortunately, I don't know anything about this one. Supposedly it's in TX, but no idea where!)


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An fwiw, this is a fun link to pics of unusual architecture (though not limited to tiny buildings).

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