zen living room furniture

zen living room furniture

this next tiny house tour is brought to you by vikings. if you've never played vikings before, now is the perfect time to join 10 million other players and start. the new game version is epic! dominate by destroying cities, build giant fortresses, or use a more diplomatic approach to rule the world. personally, i'm all about carnage. support our channel. download vikings using the link below and get your initial protection shield for free. and my special bonus of 200 gold for a fast and successful start. portland is an undeniable tiny house hotspot here in the usa, so it should come as no surprise that it's also home to a lot of innovation. today we've traveled to see an incredible tiny house project that's packed with some truly ingenious ideas.


g'day whit. -hey. -good to meet you, mate. -welcome. -g'day cody. how are you doing? -nice to meet you. guys, this house is off the hook. -thank you. -what actually inspired you to build a tiny house here in your backyard? we couldn't build a tree house here. (laughing) seriously, we want to, we just want to build and we thought building a tiny house would be cool, so we went for it. yeah, we wanted to buy some land and build a tree house but neither of us had enough money for land, so we already had the backyard, already had the cement pad and started building. -two friends building a tiny house together, that can definitely make or break relationships. what was it like working on this project together?


well basically, i'm an engineer and he's more of a creative type, so if anything looks good you can blame him, if anything works well, it's probably my fault, and if something doesn't work well, it's probably his fault anyway. -yeah, that's true. so one thing that happens with us working together is a discussion can take a long time, and if i don't feel like waiting a long time to figure out how we're gonna do something i don't talk to cody and i just do it by myself, and then he comes back, and he's like, "okay i guess this is how we're doing it." -you know friendships are built on shared experience, and it's hard to have more of a shared experience than building something like this with just the two of you and a little help from your dad.


yeah, and your bedroom's, like, right next to my bedroom now. -yeah. -so we both come out of the same house to work on this house, and it's like 50 feet away, but one of the things that's been fun is that we, i think we complement each other in the way that we work and we definitely both respect one another. i'll speak for cody that he respects me. i have no idea, but it sounds good. -you'll never know. that's probably because cody doesn't talk very much and he can, he has, like, a lot of patience for me who talks a lot and he's ridiculously awkward and i'm, like, really patient with awkward people. -yeah, and i need some entertainment so that's why i have him. so how big is this tiny house actually? well, it's on a 24 foot trailer


and it's the legal width limit of 8 and a half feet wide, so it's about 200 square feet with a footprint, but we've got a six foot loft on the back end and a four foot loft on the front end and a net going between the two, so we more or less double that square footage. -it looks like you've used some super interesting woods in this project as well. -so this is all cedar that we got from this woman who actually gets her cedar from the mills nearby, and so if you look around, there some spots that have little dings in them and for that, we got a full pallet -pallett, yeah. -for a lot cheaper than you would at your local hardware store and we 'shou sugi ban' the whole thing. -so i think it was you came up with the 's'more life'. yeah, we sort of have this theme 's'more life' and so


everything's supposed to look like a marshmallow that's being held over a fire so this ends a little darker and it gets lighter on that end and then it's just cedar over there, and then we burnt all the edges, but it's already taken a lot of sun so it's harder to tell. -awesome, well i absolutely love the way that it looks on the outside. can you show me through the inside? -definitely, come on in. -all right, thank you! this is seriously cool. the net, what a cool idea. yeah. -what actually gave you the idea to do this? i came across the net at another air


b&b or a rental house in san francisco years ago and always thought that i wanted it somewhere in one of my houses, so when cody and i started coming up with ideas, i said, "we need to have a net." he said, "okay, we can do that." and we've literally designed everything around the idea of that this net was gonna go here. -and just from a design perspective it works so well, as well, because you can still see right the way through the ceiling so you don't lose any perception of space inside the house, but you've actually gained a lot of usable floor area. yeah it's basically like having a really big hammock that you can lay down anywhere on there and instantly be comfortable.


and so we've entered into your kitchen space but you do have two potential entrance ways in the home. -right. so can you tell me a little bit about the design of the kitchen? yeah, we wanted a big kitchen, just a lot of space. and i don't know there was something about the bathroom being on one side and we knew we wanted to have the dining nook on the other side, so that kind of left the kitchen being on this side. and we just liked how it turned out. the long kitchen's just a nice space. -yeah, and then we also found this gigantic window at a


discount window place. all of the windows here are overstock windows, including the skylight, so we got a great deal and we designed around the windows basically, so with this big window here, made sense to put a counter here, the stove and the vent there, and yeah. -yeah, we sort of knew that we wanted this space over here to be a lounge area. i'd come across a picture of a small space that i really liked and designed a lot of the house off of this space and then transitioning into this space so we put in this bench to kind of connect to the countertop and my dad's helped a lot with some of the cabinetry and whatnot so he helped us put in this table which flips up at the


neck. and then, from there, we made the lounge area, which also turns into a dining nook. but it has a lot of different functions. so the table flips out and turns into a bed. we can flip this back up so now we've got it set so two people can sit across from each other and enjoy a meal, but we've also built it so this piece goes up through and connects here for four people. - that is a very clever design


and what a great way of just completely opening up the space and really, just creating a comfortable space to hang with friends. i love it and as with any tiny house of course everything has storage in it so all of these lift up for storage. in the stairs there's a lot of storage. storage everywhere. -so we've got this lath art. the lath comes from inside old portland houses. and we needed it for our outside siding and we use the leftovers to build these art projects which you'll see in the bathroom and here and there, so should we go take a look at the bathroom? let's do it? that looks really great, can you explain to me a little bit about this lath art and what it really is


yes so lath is what used to be built into old houses if you've heard of lath and plaster what they did it's got wood with little slits in it, and then you put plaster on it hangs there so now we use drywall and so when you take out lath and plaster you put up drywall and all the lath comes out and here in portland a lot of people try to save this stuff so other people can reuse it so this likely came out of a house that was built in the early 1900s and i like that it's being reused and it's being visible instead of inside a wall it's outside a wall, and can you tell me about the layout of your bathroom? well we have a 32 inch square shower pan and that had to go in one corner and


toilet in the other and you put a composting toilet in yeah, it's a nature's head, it's most tiny houses that i know of have composting toilets and that seemed like the best option excellent well i am dying to get up there and that's net a try can we move up yeah, let's do it, okay? wow this is seriously, cool especially having the skylight there it just completely makes this feel like a luxury space doesn't it yeah? it's really cool, and i'm glad you guys came on a rainy day cuz it's pretty neat to get to lay underneath the skylights under the rain so when you were designing this space


what were the elements that you absolutely had to have in here? i think the biggest - maybe the the only thing that we absolutely had to have was the net and trying to figure out how to layout this space and how to create the openings and how? that was all going to be attached and secured and a nice big open space yeah one of the fun things to figure out was how? people at our height would walk up the stairs without hitting their head in the net so we had to get this exact cut out and the angles you can see go you know climb up from the loft and then climb down on the other side because one loft is slightly higher than the other so this isn't just a rectangle net with two


holes in it is designed specifically for this space so as the space is potentially gonna be used as an air b&b it's a really great design because you could actually sleep a lot of people up here couldn't you we could i? don't know that we want to open this place up to having a group of eight or ten people were staying in here you know it is a tiny house, but you can definitely. you know we built this loft to be able to hold a king we'll probably put a queen here we carpeted that side, so it could be sort of a lounge, but it can hold a twin and then you can definitely have a person or two sleep out on the net if you wanted to how many do you think this could actually hold?


i think safely it could easily hold up to four people i'm sure it could hold more, but i wouldn't want to push it more than that spoken like a true engineer. yeah, i think it can hold like twelve everywhere i look there are really nice materials and really clever design elements what are some of your favorite aspects of this space? i really like the floor even though it took us way too long to make the floor is actually made out of an old rain cover that used to be over this rv pad so he disassembled that and then did end grain cuts and then hand sanded every single tile and then stained it saved sawdust turned it into grout and


laid the whole floor down sanded that down and then stained the whole thing so it was a long process we probably wouldn't do that again, but it was cool. then the ladder over there is made out of the first salvaged wood that we got before we even got the trailer and we just put it in so it was fun. actually getting to use something that we saved from so long ago and the countertop is a door that came from my house that we weren't using and we cut out a spot for the sink and then we did a layer of cement over that to build that the cabinets i started to build them my dad came and saved the day and said i'll finish these for you and did all the cabinetry all the doors the drawers


including on the stairs i think that's all the things that i really like there's no question that a tremendous amount of time and effort has gone into building this space what about the cost of a project like this? - well the biggest cost is absurd waiver? but in terms of materials, i've been doing the accounting and i think we're about a bit under $25,000 for all the materials including the trailer that is a really astounding result considering not only the finish but also all of the innovation in this space


yeah, it's all about i guess finding the materials that you can at a good price from the reused materials at the rebuilding center and the restore and then figuring out once you have the materials what you can do with them so having now almost completed this space is there anything that you'd want to change about your design i don't think so this is it's functional in the way that we want it to be i think it feels like a place that you'd want to come to stay for a few nights. it wasn't designed to be somebody's home long term i think it could transform into that for sure for somebody, but this is definitely a place that i'd want to come visit


this whole space is super creative. i love all of just these ingenious elements like this hammock that you eventually put in this house i want to shake your hands for this amazing project, but honestly. i'm just too comfortable right here in the hammock so congratulations to both of you on this amazing project. yeah. thank you i wish you could stay forever, but i'm sure you got other places to be well i don't know if you guys can pay for a couple nights of rent. we could use the cash recoup some of the build cost. this tiny house is a great example of teamwork really paying off the loft net for example has to be one of the coolest things i've seen in a tiny house so far and i think it


really goes to show that just because you're designing a small space. it doesn't mean you can't include some really big ideas


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