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Jan 10 2010

Fencl Tiny House Tour

Published by at 10:11 am under Small Homes,Small Space Living,Tiny House Plans

For anyone who may have missed this video over on Ryan Mitchell’s The Tiny Life, Jonathan Bellow’s has posted a video of his customized Fencl in the process of being built.

This is probably my favorite of the Tumbleweed designs so I was excited to see how someone has modified one for his own purposes.

9 responses so far

9 Responses to “Fencl Tiny House Tour”

  1. Frethon 10 Jan 2010 at 1:50 pm

    That was absolutely delightful!
    It didn’t linger long on any one thing …
    so I watched it several times.
    But it was a very pleasant tour of his Fencl Tiny House.
    :-)

  2. James NomadRipon 10 Jan 2010 at 9:10 pm

    I haven’t looked real close at that floorplan, but that nook area makes it seem much bigger than I was expecting.

  3. Jayon 11 Jan 2010 at 8:20 am

    I have a question. How hard is it to get the queen bed into the loft?

  4. Jayon 14 Jan 2010 at 7:43 am

    I was wondering where he got those really cool LED lamps.

  5. ejon 14 Jan 2010 at 9:19 pm

    It looks like the outside window trim is recessed into the paneling. Probably not a good idea.

    Curious to see someone actually live/eat/sleep in a tiny house w/o outsourcing. I didn’t see any real food items in the frig.

  6. Stephon 20 Jan 2010 at 9:21 am

    EJ, that’s an interesting point. I’ll try to do some research on people cooking in their tiny homes and see what I come up with.

  7. Stephon 20 Jan 2010 at 9:21 am

    Jay, let me see if I can find out. :)

  8. Stephon 20 Jan 2010 at 9:22 am

    Jay, I’ve actually been wondering that one myself. :) Let me ask a few people I know.

  9. Doodon 20 Apr 2010 at 7:53 pm

    If you visit the store every day or so, you don’t need a huge amount of food in storage. I’ve got a refrigerator roughly the size of a Fencl filled with condiments and industrial-sized food items from Sam’s Club. Back in ancient times when people didn’t have the fridge/freezer, this simply wasn’t an option (and yet they somehow survived.)

    Big city living style, where you pass grocery stores on your daily walk to work or commuting site (bus station, train station) allows you to easily live a minimal grocery storage lifestyle. Big cities also have reasonably priced street food which can take care of your breakfast/lunch. Cooking three meals a day at home could be a little tricky, I imagine.

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