Micro house
Sandy Beach House The Whangapoua Sled House is located near the shores of the Coromandel Peninsula in New Zeeland. It was built by Ken Crosson of Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects. The house has large glass doors, a retractable folding door which exposes the second floor and lots of shelving on the walls. On the first floor there’s a small dining area and a kitchen and a separate room features three bunk beds.
Glorious micro house. - To connect with us, and our community of people from…
Architecture Student 75 Sq. Ft. Micro House
https://www.maisonsbonneville.com/nos-maisons/nano-97
MICRO HOUSE WITH SKY LOFT. While it looks like a greenhouse, this coastal home in California, built by Mickey Muennig, has a removable window which helps keep the place cool. More
A 256 sq ft cabin with two bedrooms, a full kitchen, bathroom, living room and a fireplace.
La micro maison de Catherine Duval et Pascal Dubé
The Urban Micro House: a 600 sq ft home from Wind River Tiny Homes
aestatestudio: “Daily inspiration. Learn more about the project www.aestate.be ”
Haven| Serafini Amelia| A Grand Design-Micro Living-Design Small Living Spaces-Tiny house
Amazon.com - iHeater IH-50-W Micro Plug-In Infrared Heater, Heats Up to 250 Square Feet, White - Portable Space Heaters
Prefabricated Hangar Homes are Micro Houses on Wheels
Tiny House Living: $ 200 Microhouses Built with Scavenged Stuff Recycling can be fun. But then, how about picking up dump worthy stuff to make a living space? Possible. In case you are not convinced, we would like to show you Derek Diedricksen’s venture into that terrain. The 33-year old carpenter has excelled in making tiny houses from scavenged materials. And, if you are thinking of the budget, each house costs only $ 200 to build!
Beijing-based architecture firm Standardarchitecture revitalized a 300-400 year-old historic #courtyard once housing a temple and turned into residences in the 1950s #renovation
The Hawaii House from Tiny Heirloom
A beautiful contemporary home that measures just 500 sq ft.















