Edward
Bartender
- Messages
- 25,082
- Location
- London, UK
There are houses (and other structures) made from retired airliners.
I once considered buying an old passenger rail car that had served as a construction and leasing office at a recently completed suburban office park. Wiring and plumbing were already in, so it was livable as it was.
It was an entirely romantic notion. I had no place to put the thing (it was a good 60 feet long or more, as I recall) nor a clue as to how to move it.
But, for a person with such resources, it would be a hit as a short-term rental (which didn’t really exist back then).
I’ve lived in a garret, I’ve lived in a converted chicken coop, I’ve considered living aboard a boat. But really, I much prefer living in a house built to be a house, on dry land, without wheels under it. And I like not sharing walls, nor floors, nor ceilings.
But man, there remain some waaaay cool trailer parks. Some of those vintage house trailers (as we called them then) are great eye candy. And while the residents might be able to touch their neighbors’ houses without getting out of their folding lawn chairs, at least they aren’t sharing walls.
My wife and I holidays at a caravan site on the Isle of Wight last year. We stayed in a cabin-chalet thing that was a step closer a permanent building, but there were some wonderful creations there that were all basically static caravans - 'trailers' as would be in the US - that were large and as good as homes. Sort of thing where you could have a large, luxury version for somewhere in the region of ten to fifteen K, no council tax (or other upcharges normally associated with second properties either), relatively small site fees..... If ever we were in a position to seriously think about a fixed holiday home, I'd consider something like that. I love London too much to want to move out, though it would be nice to have something that wasn't too much of a commitment that meant we could have weekends out, or a month out of town in July when London is dead and the heat is unbearable. With a decent broadband connection, there are times of year I could work there for a week or two if suitable as well. Rye appeals - nice place, handy enough to London for a last minute weekend or one-nighter, even.
A lot of older folks in southern England some years ago sold up when they retired and moved in to one of those sort of places. Normally there's an elven month rule (i.e. they shut for one month in the Winter, it's not a permanent living place). A lot of folks sold their house in England, bought a trailer and lived there in the Summer, then Wintered in the south of Spain. Not so easy an option for those without another route to EU citizenship post-Brexit, though.
I've often wished there was a culture of (nice) trailer parks here in London as affordable homes..... a double-wide would be bigger than my current flat, probably bigger than any house I'll ever afford here. We don't have the land for them, though - and they have something of an image problem, being broadly associated here with the traveller community, that carries its own sets of stereotypes and issues, fairly or otherwise.