The DIYer in me is drooling over the houses that Dan Phillips, an East Texan, is building out of recycled, salvaged, and scrap materials. He makes windows out of crystal platters and Pyrex lids, ceilings out of picture frame samples, and floors from wine corks or broken tiles. His creations are beautiful, quirky, and inexpensive, since it's all salvaged and recycled materials. Sometimes we need to think outside the box, and for this man, it means thinking outside standardized dimensions or building materials and beyond the cookie-cutter houses filling new subdivisions. What I like most is that he's doing this for people who need homes, not for well-to-do people with ample means to "buy green." I'd love to be part of his work crew and learn how to build his unconventional houses.
Watch the slide show first, then read the associated article One Man's Trash...
And for those of you on the other side of the pond, there's this Welsh hobbit house that I've been sighing over...
I am an old house person, but if I had to live in a new house, this is the kind of thing I'd like to do. No vinyl siding for me, thanks.
i love this style too, so organic. how and why people can like the look of the suburb and the McMansions is quite beyond my aesthetic understanding.
ReplyDeleteI have been drooling over that Hobbit house for some time now. *sigh* I would want one a little bigger though!
ReplyDeleteI now have a new dream house. In Hobbiton.
ReplyDeleteI want that Hobbit house. RIGHT NOW! The inside of it is soooooooo cool!
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ReplyDeleteI'm another long-time fan of that hobbit house. I dream big, I've even gone so far as to draw up hobbit house plans, lol! Give me a hobbit hole in the ground over cookie cutter housing any day. Thanks for sharing the story of Mr. Philips, too. It's inspiring to know that there are people like him in the world.
ReplyDeleteHow awesome are those houses! I've become enamored of recycled homes since hearing about shipping container houses. http://weburbanist.com/2008/05/26/cargo-container-homes-and-offices/
ReplyDeleteI could move into that hobbit house RIGHT NOW! You should come too! We can all be neighbors!
ReplyDeleteHave you heard of Mystery Castle in Phoenix? It was built in the 1930s... it's a sad story, actually, but the house is way-cool, and is still lived in by the daughter of the man who built it. I've been there a couple of times, but not recently. It's built from all sorts of reclaimed, repurposed, and native materials. Very cool. http://www.godblessamericana.com/the-mystery-castle-phoenix-az-1958/
ReplyDeletei love your fuzzy boys head.
ReplyDeletei love the hobbit house, too. my husband, who is a sustainable builder woke me up from my hobbit house fantasy. he may be wrong but after examining the house, he noticed there was no foundation. hobbit house might not be built to last...so enjoy your home, which most likely has a foundation to grow.
i love what you have to say always,
mb
I saw the article on the recycled houses a week or so ago and loved the whole thing - the recycled materials, the focus on helping people to help themselves...
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