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女子出售房屋,选择微型住宅生活,享受经济实惠与灵活
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受高昂的住房成本驱使,朱莉·莱诺克斯在蒙大拿州米苏拉出售了她的房屋,选择了一种经济实惠且灵活的微型住宅生活方式。她购买了一套由加拿大公司制造的、安装在拖车底盘上的可移动微型住宅,这使她能够靠近年迈的父母,并显著降低了住房开销。尽管需要适应微型生活的一些挑战,如定期补充丙烷和冬季管道防冻,但莱诺克斯表示她并不怀念旧物,并且享受这种更贴近自然的居住体验。

💰 经济效益显著:朱莉·莱诺克斯通过出售房屋,利用房款购买了一套价值约14.6万美元的微型住宅,加上1.5万美元的安装和配套费用,全部为现金支付。她目前每月的住房成本(除房贷外)低于200美元,主要为公用事业和网络费用,这与高昂的传统住房成本形成了鲜明对比。

🏠 灵活与便利:这套微型住宅是可移动的,安装在拖车底盘上,这意味着它可以在需要时被牵引到新的地点。这种灵活性让莱诺克斯能够居住在她父母的土地上,方便照顾他们,同时保留了未来搬迁的可能性,提供了传统住房所不具备的自由度。

🌱 生活方式的转变:在一次滑雪受伤康复期间,莱诺克斯通过观看微型住宅纪录片萌生了对微型生活的兴趣。选择微型住宅不仅是出于经济考虑,也是为了减少对环境的影响,实现“更小的世界足迹”。她也经历了必要的“极简主义”生活转变,但表示并不怀念过去拥有的物品。

🐶 伴侣与空间:莱诺克斯与她的拉布拉多犬Rizzo共同居住在这套微型住宅中。她认为这个空间非常适合她和她的宠物,但承认如果住多人可能会感觉更拥挤。冬季室内空间相对狭小,但在温暖的月份,她更多地在户外宽敞的空间活动,享受自然风光。

🛠️ 适应微型生活:微型住宅生活带来了一些独特的挑战,例如需要定期更换丙烷罐(冬季约五到六周一次),以及在寒冷天气里需要采取措施防止管道结冰。这些都是为了适应小空间高效利用能源和资源所必须的调整。

Julie Lennox and her dog Rizzo

Julie Lennox's fascination with tiny homes began after she tore her ACL downhill skiing in 2019.

During her long recovery from knee surgery, she spent many hours rehabbing on a stationary bike while watching a YouTube series called "Living Big in a Tiny House." Lennox, 59, was captivated by the tours of postage-stamp-sized homes, and by how creative and cost-effective the lifestyle seemed.

"It made me a little bit obsessed with tiny homes," she said. "It just seemed like a cool way to have a smaller footprint in the world."

But she didn't think seriously about shrinking her own footprint until 2021, when she and her former partner split up and sold their three-bedroom house in Missoula, Montana.

A surge in demand for housing across the Mountain West had sent home values skyrocketing in Missoula, and Lennox couldn't afford much on the market. So she moved in with her parents on their 15-acre property just outside the city and began planning to build her own tiny home in their backyard.

Julie Lennox outside her tiny home on wheels near Missoula, Montana.

Lennox, the head of a local private school in Missoula, eventually settled on a prefabricated mobile tiny home built and delivered to her by a Canadian company, Teacup Tiny Homes, in 2022. Unlike a regular tiny home, the structure was built on a trailer chassis and sits permanently on wheels, so it can be towed and relocated to a different piece of land if needed.

The tiny home on wheels, also known as a THOW, has allowed Lennox to significantly reduce her housing costs over the last three years. It's also enabled her to live next door to her parents, whom she cooks dinner for almost every night, while giving her the flexibility to move the home if she ever wants to. She's among a growing number of Americans, including older people who are downsizing, who are choosing this alternative form of housing.

Saving money by downsizing

Perhaps the biggest upside of the move has been the cost savings.

Lennox spent 191,000 Canadian dollars, which was about $146,000 at the time, buying the home. She estimates she spent another $15,000 installing a pad for the structure to sit on, building a porch around it, and hooking it up to water, sewer, and electricity. She didn't take out a mortgage; she used the cash from her home sale to cover all of her costs.

These days, her housing costs are limited to utilities and home repairs, the latter of which she estimates she's spent less than $500 on over the last three years.

Julie Lennox's tiny home on wheels outside Missoula, Montana.

Because the home is so small, Lennox said she spends only about $600 a year on propane, which she uses for cooking, to heat her home and water, and to power her dryer. She hooked her home up to her parents' electricity, which powers the pump for her well water and keeps the lights on. While her parents cover the electricity bill, Lennox said her costs are quite low. In exchange, Lennox pays the Starlink Internet bill for her parents, her sister, and herself, which is $100 a month.

This brings her average monthly housing costs to less than $200.

But there's been a learning curve associated with tiny living. She's had to adjust to removing and refilling her propane tank regularly — every five or six weeks in the winter — and making sure to leave her taps dripping in the winter to prevent her pipes from freezing.

And her move required a fair amount of downsizing. But Lennox says that, these days, she doesn't miss any of her old stuff. And she's able to store some large things, like her skis and bicycles, in her parents' garage.

Lennox's tiny home on wheels

She shares her home with her dog, Rizzo, a 10-year-old labradoodle. It's just enough space for the two of them.

"I think if it were more than one person, that would feel a little more challenging," she said.

The quarters also feel a bit more cramped when it's cold out. "The winters can be a little bit harder because it is such a small space, and so I feel a little more closed in," Lennox said.

Her living space is larger in the warmer months, as she spends much of her time outside on her porch, surrounded by Ponderosa pines and Douglas-fir trees, with a view of the Blackfoot River.

"Sometimes I feel more like I'm camping than I am living in my house," she said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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微型住宅 Tiny Home 生活方式 经济实惠 灵活性 极简主义 Julie Lennox Montana Cost-effective living Alternative housing
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