This guy nailed it! I am so tired of the lack of creativity and the cookie cutter nature of new residential neighborhoods in my area. I really appreciate all the planning and design and thoughtfulness that was put into this project. well done!
Well, consistency has been a huge part of building codes for pretty much forever, far before the HOA bullshit we have today. Sure, they may have different individual details, but just look at NYC's old townhouses. Many of them are exactly the same, with different color palates.
@@safeandeffectivelolthey are really close together, but that’s the point. The goal of building houses like this is to increase density close to downtowns.
he clearly put a lot of thought into the creation of this miniature neighborhood. I wish more developers would look at projects with a similar approach. He diddnt have to, but he did. That speaks magnitudes
It is not going to be a "pocket" anything. When a rich neighborhood lets this happen anyone who can move will and the whole place takes a nose dive in value and the only people living there are ones that can not afford someplace else. In every city across the south there are multiple examples. It never changes it always happens.
Perfect example of missing middle. Also a neighborhood of these would be great complete with relaxed zoning laws to allow commercial properties to be mixed in
It takes courage to build like this outside the accepted model. I think most people aren't willing to invest in a project like this where the return is less predictable, and that's a shame. This is how you revitalize cities!
It's true. It takes an original esthetic sense and some passion to truly revitalize and create. ALSO, as he mentioned, it takes a lot more TIME to build like this man has. Most developers and builders just don't work that way.
"Courage" is not the word the three neighbors will have in mind when they face the reality of sharing a single, one car width, wrap around driveway. Imagine having to ask your neighbor to move their car so you can get out of the driveway. Imagine, instead of a little private patio out your back door, you instead have a communal parking lot and shares circular driveway that might have through traffic 24/7. The only thing more insane and ignorant than the design is anyone who would subject themselves to daily headaches and intrinsic irritations by (no doubt temporarily) choosing to live in this failed experiment.
@@robertzabinski6083 The weird driveway means no backyard, shared inconvenience... the tiny bedrooms where a bed "just fits"... no garages... it's bold, but it's a weird bold.
@@robertzabinski6083 oh, someone was too busy being negative and derogatory to notice the car parking spaces (where there is now a trailer, for example). I would do one or two things differently, but to declare an entire project unusable because of a very subjective and personal car habit is a bit of a stretch.
@@deichhund Spaghetti with maple syrup washed down with a mustard, beet, and raw egg smoothie. Like the culinary arts, (residential) architecture has a time tested vocabulary. Creativity within the bounds of that vocabulary has a better chance of becoming a palatable, if not favored menu item. Reckless experiments end up in the dog bowl.
My dude did an excellent job of making that brick building look like an old building that got a facelift instead of a new build cosplaying as vintage. Good for him!
His project is beautiful and creative. BUT, NOT FOR NOTHIN, if he can't give credit to Chip and Joanna Gaines for their concept and design on the shotgun house, I find everything else he says about his part in developing the project suspect. SHAME ON HIM. Give credit where due. Team work mays the dream work.
We need more neighborhoods like this, these soulless poorly build cookie cutter homes are a disaster. I want more people to be able to afford homes and I think building smaller higher quality homes is the way to do it as compared to large poorly build cookie cutters. I also love that he saved the shotgun home from demolition, older homes are build way better than modern homes with higher quality proper two by lumber. Once my business is to the point of reinvesting I want to build a few little neighborhoods like this in my city to hopefully help with affordability.
Having lived in Louisiana my whole life, I'm very used to shotgun houses. I love the way he used that concept in his build and the way he renovated that house was delightful.
Me, too. My understanding was that they were created from barges going down the Mississippi-hence the uniformity. I’m old & was looking at living in a container house but it may be cheaper to work with studio shed & build something. Love the house.
@@MarikoYatsu-k8i Yes they were made with bargeboards. But , in New Orleans many of the lots were long and skinny, so I think it has more to do with lot size than building material.
@@janmarchand7294 I’m in Ms. & often travel across the river to NewOrleans. Love the shotgun houses. I got married on Burgundy St in the chapel w/ that red door & all the chandeliers. I love the French inspired & Spanish mix w/ all the old historic places. Love the shotgun houses around Tipatina & Tulane
I love this guy! I especially appreciate that he respects and takes advantage of 3 dimensions. I never understood the focus on area, neglecting volume, as if we don't experience and use all directions of space.
This is the house from Fixer Upper. I’m surprised he didn’t mention that. Odd. He must have been the owner but I thought I remember a young couple. I saw it was for sale for $950k. I hope that was a mistype! Those are LA prices. And for essentially a studio apt. I thought everyone from CA was moving to Texas because it is so cheap. Yikes! Nicely done property but whew that’s pricey! And, as always, Kirsten’s video is fabulous!
I have in the text that he was helped by the show for that first build. Though they weren't part of the other builds which was the focus of this video (his work using the small lot ordinance to build density and a diversity of housing on one lot). He also admitted that he could have gone for more density and just put in an apartment building, but I thought these 4 different styles on one lot was charming and well worth a video. Thanks for the comment-- not all videos are fabulous, but very kind of you.
I thought so, too. I remember that episode and the staircase that can be lifted up...yes, interesting it was never mentioned. I got the initial impression that this guy in the video built it.
Fabulous. Although I’m surprised he didn’t install underfloor heating . Putting a large concrete slab on the floor is a superb idea. - breath thermal mass or thermal buffering…… we would normally put Underfloor Heating (a radiant wet system). Just like the Romans did that way your feet are lovely and warm in winter….. In the summer, you can even run cold water through it
Oh, watching them move that house brought back memories. My dad was a contractor in the fifties/sixties, and specialized in concrete work and house moving with an Army surplus 6X6. We watched several of the moves. When Weyerhauser sold off the company homes next to their sawmill (yes, I grew up in Twin Peaks), they moved several of them to new locations. He built our home from a chicken house a client gave him in payment. They did such a good job on the brick building: it really does capture the look of an authentic small town/cityk business building.
Thanks for another great video! It's crazy that this was the first time this guy ever did something like this. I love the esthetic and his reasons for doing it all. The world needs more people doing this!
No he’s not…he used the popularity of HGTV’s Fixer Upper who moved/renovated the first shotgun house to create a demand for the other AirBNBs he built next to it, and now he’s using Kirsten to help him sell them all. That’s not visionary.
Oh. Obviously I did not know that (I live in a small country and don't watch tv). Thanks for the heads up. I don't know how I feel about Kirsten now. I thought she was infallable.@@cghoward70
This guy has imagination and courage to go against the flow. This development is so great on many levels. I just love that it has heart and soul. Others may be inspired to make a difference. Love it.♥
I like the first shotgun house. The build was documented on Fixer Upper. It was cool seeing the house moved and all of the little things they had to do to make it turn out so great 😀
We helped build a “shotgun” house in Sheridan, Wyoming back in 2013 as part of a Habitat for Humanity project. We were told that the “shotgun” feature referred to a long, narrow house with the front and back doors and the doors/openings between rooms all line up. This would make it possible to open the front and back doors and shoot a shotgun through the house. No idea if that’s actually true or not, and the house we worked on had the passages between rooms offset, so it did not conform exactly to this definition/description.
This is super cool. I love that he mentioned that people think they need a bunch of space, but when they see these houses they say, "I could actually live here." Socially, there's still a long way to go (1 parking spot required per bedroom is an absolute insane law) but this kind of work really helps people see that there are other ways outside of endless sprawl.
Wasn't that first house designed and built by Chip and Joanna Gaines from HGTV? I think the storyline was that he owned a coffee shop with his wife and they wanted a home. He and his wife moved into the house.
Love watching your videos. I've been watching your home tours for years. I think the first one I saw was the underground house done by the guy that helped geese or ducks fly south for the winter.
Id love if multi home lots became more common for multi-generation living and increased walkability in downtown areas. The different styles that share general shapes like tall windows and colors look so cute together.
I love this. I love small houses and I often dream of doing different architectural styles such as the brownstone, art deco , midcentury and Mediterranean. I think it's great for architectural students to study and practice on a smaller scale.
Love the brick built house, but it is never going to look old because of the windows. A 'shotgun house' is one where you can stand at the front door and shot straight through to the back door. @16:39, love the tiling but it's odd having to walk through an open space to reach another room. @21:00, love the engraving. From a distance, I thought the door was corten steel. The block would make a nice family compound, but the units are too small and close together to make good neighbours.
agree with your comments regarding the "dog trot" house, Imagine wanting a snack at midnight on a stormy night... having to walk outside to the other side. Maybe add drop down shutters for the winter season? but cute house.
Yes the shotgun house is from Fixer Upper (as I mention in the text), but the rest of the houses are his idea. That's the real focus of this story are what he's trying to do with 4 houses on one lot. I like all the different styles, particularly the dogtrot house.
@@kirstendirksen He seemed to be saying that the shotgun house was his idea and he had to do the logistics of moving it and everything. Was the Fixer Upper episode phony? Did they not really do all the work on that house?
So you can rent out the space with the kitchen & living room as an office space without a bathroom? And the other space with the bathroom and bedroom can be rented out as a separate apartment?
I wasn't really keen on the all brick building because I thought it was supposed to be a home and it didn't really match the other three homes he built. But after listening to him I realized he envisioned it as a commercial space. I liked his energy and kind demeanor. And it was obvious that he cared about what he built. That it wasn't just about making money.
No, i think he likes it to 'seem' like an old fashioned commercial space with an apartment above but in reality it's 2 separate apartments, he just hasn't put the back stairs in yet.
ONE OF MY FAVORITE FIXER UPPER HOMES DONE BY CHIP AND JOANNA GAINES!!! ABSOLUTELY LOVE WHAT CHIP AND JOANNA DID TO PRESERVE THIS HOUSE! Fixer upper season 3
So inspiring. Would be great to team up with a landscape architect to suggest affordable solutions for providing privacy. Vines on screens, trellis, etc. Great ideas for cities like Detroit and Saginaw with a lot of small empty lots. Wish they could be proactive about building quality small homes on small lots. Not everyone wants, needs or can afford the average size house. Kudos to those who are changing the cities one creative solution at a time. And to you for telling the world about them.😊 TFS
I love how he meshes the old time look with the modern touches! Shotgun houses making a return... I never thought I'd see the day but, it makes so much sense in today's world where starter homes are needed as well as smaller living.
I absolutely love his idea!!!! Finally, an idea that reincorporates underutilized space and makes it function and available to all people. I love the shotgun style home. As an architect and Designer this is what I live for. Purposeful spaces how we live and in line with proper utilization.
Cameron and his wife created something amazing that revitalizes neighborhoods one street at a time. City planners and investors should get behind the Bells and expand this vision. Great job! Beautiful homes. Well done guys.
All of these are absolutely beautiful but I think you should screen in the dog Trot and put a screen door on it. That would make it a true dog trot house.
Very efficient use of allotted area, great mixing up combination of aesthetics. Avoids looking homogenous and gentrified by historical nods to Waco’s urban brownstone past and the modern upgrading of the shotgun house. Well done and congratulations to this gentleman. Much respect from Fiji.🇫🇯👍😎
Absolutely love this, so proud of him for showing what can be done thoughtfully. These are beautiful. I hope his ideas are replicated throughout America. Thank you for this spotlight on something meaningful. ❤❤❤
What an inspiration! I love that this was not necessarily done with max profit in mind, but beauty and timelessness are at the top of the list. Thank you for bringing beauty to such a sterile building era.
I love how he went for all different designs. I think it's brilliant. I think these smaller homes are beautiful. They should start allowing this more. We have a lot of people who need homes.
What's lacking is commitment from local governments and imagination. This guy nailed it! This type of housing is highly desirable, doable, and practical.
This is actually a brilliant idea. Doesn’t have to be done in just urban environments either. So much could be done with this concept even on this small scale.
I like how the shotgun house is raised. I hope they plan on building a deck in the rear of the upper floor of the brick building, otherwise watch that first step, it's a doozy!
This is a good one. It all works very well together, aesthetically. I need more space from folks, but I get how well it would work for community-minded people.
Love this video! Love what he's doing! On Leslie near Michigan Ave in Lansing there's a Cottage Court with I think 6 homes on 2x2 lots back to back. Take 2 of those, and 2 of these, and you turn 14 city lots into 20+ units of housing. What kills me is the "one parking spot per bedroom" which is one of the most ridiculous things I've heard. A 2-car family with 3 kids could need be 3 to 5 bedrooms, creating overparking by design, and favoring studios apartments over family dwellings. Even when a lot of things go right, American zoning law tries to kill good development.
I 100% see the goal of this lot to recreate a community that is timeless, it’s appreciating how this seems to be on everyone’s focus more and more when it comes to homes.
Not to pick nits, lol, but the term "shotgun house" usually has a door at the end of the house so that you could fire a shotgun at the front door and it could pass throush the house and out the back door without hitting anything. So the reference has slightly less to do with how skinny they were but the simple, long layout (and doors at both ends ;?)
I'm from AR and a "Shotgun House" is a narrow house were you can stand at the front door, look straight thru the house, and see out the back door...just like looking through the barrel of a SHOTGUN!😁
Man, I love what this guy is doing but how much rent is he going to have to charge to just cover his cost? He is putting a lot of quality into these units.
wouldnt hVE been cheaper just to built a new shotgun home.. other than sentimental value I cant help but think of house costly moving, new foundation, new pillars, new roof .... it basically a new home... so why start with a crack house, I admire him reusing stuff thats already here tho
I've collected so many ideas for homes that'll never work together in a single home. This guy had the same problem and decided to just build multiple different homes to implement everything he found interesting. Solid idea.
I remember that shotgun house from Chip and Joanna's show (back when I used to watch it). I love what they did with the house, but I love the other houses on the property a lot more. Especially the brick one. A house like that is definitely my dream home.
I love the imagination and creativity. It doesn’t matter. If you got it from someone or else he fulfilled it he saw it and he did it. He didn’t try he did.
I like the concept of two separate units joined by a shared porch. It’s perfect for roommates, or someone with a small business who has clients come in.
Is this guy suggesting that he designed the blue shotgun house? Chip and Joanna Gaines designed this house. I watched that episode years ago. What’s going on with that? Before he even went over to it, I was telling my husband all about it and what was inside.
Just love this guy! I wish more development like this could happen and hopefully, it could be affordable. High ceilings and smaller square footage is the way to go. These kinds of neighbourhoods could reduce need for three or four cars in every driveway! and be more walkable and transit positive. Inspiring.
This guy nailed it! I am so tired of the lack of creativity and the cookie cutter nature of new residential neighborhoods in my area. I really appreciate all the planning and design and thoughtfulness that was put into this project. well done!
Well, consistency has been a huge part of building codes for pretty much forever, far before the HOA bullshit we have today. Sure, they may have different individual details, but just look at NYC's old townhouses. Many of them are exactly the same, with different color palates.
This is a tourist area and these are AirBNBs…fitting as many individual units as you can makes you more money. Common sense…not creative.
@@cghoward70 these places arent rented/leased out or sold to families ? That defeats the whole purpose of creating more actual homes .
I like the designs too, but those houses are too close together. I want some room in between. That's why people moved out of the cities.
@@safeandeffectivelolthey are really close together, but that’s the point. The goal of building houses like this is to increase density close to downtowns.
he clearly put a lot of thought into the creation of this miniature neighborhood. I wish more developers would look at projects with a similar approach. He diddnt have to, but he did. That speaks magnitudes
Love the "Pocket Community" aspect to this, creating/revitalizing a micro-neighborhood within a community where one didn't exist.
It is not going to be a "pocket" anything. When a rich neighborhood lets this happen anyone who can move will and the whole place takes a nose dive in value and the only people living there are ones that can not afford someplace else. In every city across the south there are multiple examples. It never changes it always happens.
Perfect example of missing middle. Also a neighborhood of these would be great complete with relaxed zoning laws to allow commercial properties to be mixed in
It takes courage to build like this outside the accepted model. I think most people aren't willing to invest in a project like this where the return is less predictable, and that's a shame. This is how you revitalize cities!
It's true. It takes an original esthetic sense and some passion to truly revitalize and create.
ALSO, as he mentioned, it takes a lot more TIME to build like this man has. Most developers and builders just don't work that way.
"Courage" is not the word the three neighbors will have in mind when they face the reality of sharing a single, one car width, wrap around driveway. Imagine having to ask your neighbor to move their car so you can get out of the driveway. Imagine, instead of a little private patio out your back door, you instead have a communal parking lot and shares circular driveway that might have through traffic 24/7.
The only thing more insane and ignorant than the design is anyone who would subject themselves to daily headaches and intrinsic irritations by (no doubt temporarily) choosing to live in this failed experiment.
@@robertzabinski6083 The weird driveway means no backyard, shared inconvenience... the tiny bedrooms where a bed "just fits"... no garages... it's bold, but it's a weird bold.
@@robertzabinski6083 oh, someone was too busy being negative and derogatory to notice the car parking spaces (where there is now a trailer, for example). I would do one or two things differently, but to declare an entire project unusable because of a very subjective and personal car habit is a bit of a stretch.
@@deichhund Spaghetti with maple syrup washed down with a mustard, beet, and raw egg smoothie. Like the culinary arts, (residential) architecture has a time tested vocabulary. Creativity within the bounds of that vocabulary has a better chance of becoming a palatable, if not favored menu item. Reckless experiments end up in the dog bowl.
My dude did an excellent job of making that brick building look like an old building that got a facelift instead of a new build cosplaying as vintage. Good for him!
I remember the green shotgun 2-story house from Fixer-Upper. As soon as I saw it I recognized it.
I thought that I saw the drawbridge steps there.
The downstairs in the brick building begs for a neighborhood coffeeshop!
I love this guy!!! He should be a city planner/developer. Such great optimistic energy and great ideas!
His project is beautiful and creative. BUT, NOT FOR NOTHIN, if he can't give credit to Chip and Joanna Gaines for their concept and design on the shotgun house, I find everything else he says about his part in developing the project suspect. SHAME ON HIM. Give credit where due. Team work mays the dream work.
Love how he used the size of the property, reused material, referred to his mate often (A good sign of a happy union).
We need more neighborhoods like this, these soulless poorly build cookie cutter homes are a disaster. I want more people to be able to afford homes and I think building smaller higher quality homes is the way to do it as compared to large poorly build cookie cutters. I also love that he saved the shotgun home from demolition, older homes are build way better than modern homes with higher quality proper two by lumber. Once my business is to the point of reinvesting I want to build a few little neighborhoods like this in my city to hopefully help with affordability.
That's $950,000 for a zero lot home in downtown Waco
Having lived in Louisiana my whole life, I'm very used to shotgun houses. I love the way he used that concept in his build and the way he renovated that house was delightful.
Me, too. My understanding was that they were created from barges going down the Mississippi-hence the uniformity.
I’m old & was looking at living in a container house but it may be cheaper to work with studio shed & build something. Love the house.
Too bad he took credit for someone else’s work/design.
@@PatriciaStevens-rv6kn Exactly - Joanna Gaines.
@@MarikoYatsu-k8i Yes they were made with bargeboards. But , in New Orleans many of the lots were long and skinny, so I think it has more to do with lot size than building material.
@@janmarchand7294 I’m in Ms. & often travel across the river to NewOrleans. Love the shotgun houses. I got married on Burgundy St in the chapel w/ that red door & all the chandeliers. I love the French inspired & Spanish mix w/ all the old historic places.
Love the shotgun houses around Tipatina & Tulane
Love what this guy is doing with old, derelict houses and repurposing them in the same general neighborhood. Very original designs and great vision.
I love this guy!
I especially appreciate that he respects and takes advantage of 3 dimensions. I never understood the focus on area, neglecting volume, as if we don't experience and use all directions of space.
Really like his mixed home style, it's a great way to showcase usable space and still have some flair to the styles. Fantastic 😍
This is the house from Fixer Upper. I’m surprised he didn’t mention that. Odd. He must have been the owner but I thought I remember a young couple. I saw it was for sale for $950k. I hope that was a mistype! Those are LA prices. And for essentially a studio apt. I thought everyone from CA was moving to Texas because it is so cheap. Yikes! Nicely done property but whew that’s pricey! And, as always, Kirsten’s video is fabulous!
I have in the text that he was helped by the show for that first build. Though they weren't part of the other builds which was the focus of this video (his work using the small lot ordinance to build density and a diversity of housing on one lot). He also admitted that he could have gone for more density and just put in an apartment building, but I thought these 4 different styles on one lot was charming and well worth a video. Thanks for the comment-- not all videos are fabulous, but very kind of you.
23:15 @@Kara_2505
Wow, what's the point of building small if it's not affordable? Shame.
I thought so, too. I remember that episode and the staircase that can be lifted up...yes, interesting it was never mentioned. I got the initial impression that this guy in the video built it.
950k for only one unit not all of them? No wonder no bank wants to finance this project. That is insanity.
Fabulous. Although I’m surprised he didn’t install underfloor heating . Putting a large concrete slab on the floor is a superb idea. - breath thermal mass or thermal buffering…… we would normally put Underfloor Heating (a radiant wet system). Just like the Romans did that way your feet are lovely and warm in winter….. In the summer, you can even run cold water through it
12:19 - "it's not perfect and it doesn't feel like it should be." It certainly jives with the overall aesthetic. Good job.
Oh, watching them move that house brought back memories. My dad was a contractor in the fifties/sixties, and specialized in concrete work and house moving with an Army surplus 6X6. We watched several of the moves. When Weyerhauser sold off the company homes next to their sawmill (yes, I grew up in Twin Peaks), they moved several of them to new locations. He built our home from a chicken house a client gave him in payment.
They did such a good job on the brick building: it really does capture the look of an authentic small town/cityk business building.
Thanks for another great video! It's crazy that this was the first time this guy ever did something like this. I love the esthetic and his reasons for doing it all. The world needs more people doing this!
Great urban creativity. Nothing worse than cookie cutter streets. Thanks for sharing your passion.🍁🤙
This guy is brilliant! He's a social visionary, and having fun doing it.
No he’s not…he used the popularity of HGTV’s Fixer Upper who moved/renovated the first shotgun house to create a demand for the other AirBNBs he built next to it, and now he’s using Kirsten to help him sell them all. That’s not visionary.
Oh. Obviously I did not know that (I live in a small country and don't watch tv). Thanks for the heads up. I don't know how I feel about Kirsten now. I thought she was infallable.@@cghoward70
This guy has imagination and courage to go against the flow. This development is so great on many levels. I just love that it has heart and soul. Others may be inspired to make a difference. Love it.♥
And the know-how or at least the audacity to be so danged optimistic.
How much fun is that!🎉
I remember the tiny house reno on “FIXER UPPER”.
I like the first shotgun house. The build was documented on Fixer Upper. It was cool seeing the house moved and all of the little things they had to do to make it turn out so great 😀
I was thinking I had seen that house before when I saw the loft over the kitchen.
This guy has a great eye and really positive energy. He says he has a day job but this should be his day job!
We helped build a “shotgun” house in Sheridan, Wyoming back in 2013 as part of a Habitat for Humanity project. We were told that the “shotgun” feature referred to a long, narrow house with the front and back doors and the doors/openings between rooms all line up. This would make it possible to open the front and back doors and shoot a shotgun through the house. No idea if that’s actually true or not, and the house we worked on had the passages between rooms offset, so it did not conform exactly to this definition/description.
This is super cool. I love that he mentioned that people think they need a bunch of space, but when they see these houses they say, "I could actually live here."
Socially, there's still a long way to go (1 parking spot required per bedroom is an absolute insane law) but this kind of work really helps people see that there are other ways outside of endless sprawl.
The genius, isn't the finished project, it's the man who envisioned it. Loan him more money !!!
Wasn't that first house designed and built by Chip and Joanna Gaines from HGTV? I think the storyline was that he owned a coffee shop with his wife and they wanted a home. He and his wife moved into the house.
Love watching your videos. I've been watching your home tours for years. I think the first one I saw was the underground house done by the guy that helped geese or ducks fly south for the winter.
Can you please send me the link to that video? Thank you.
Id love if multi home lots became more common for multi-generation living and increased walkability in downtown areas. The different styles that share general shapes like tall windows and colors look so cute together.
It also solves so many things, like children not being able to afford homes and parents getting older.
I love the community concept and the fact he didn’t make the houses cookie cutter. The dog house is interesting. Overall his project is amazing
I love this. I love small houses and I often dream of doing different architectural styles such as the brownstone, art deco , midcentury and Mediterranean. I think it's great for architectural students to study and practice on a smaller scale.
Yes, it's hard to choose just one.
Love the brick built house, but it is never going to look old because of the windows. A 'shotgun house' is one where you can stand at the front door and shot straight through to the back door. @16:39, love the tiling but it's odd having to walk through an open space to reach another room. @21:00, love the engraving. From a distance, I thought the door was corten steel. The block would make a nice family compound, but the units are too small and close together to make good neighbours.
agree with your comments regarding the "dog trot" house, Imagine wanting a snack at midnight on a stormy night... having to walk outside to the other side. Maybe add drop down shutters for the winter season? but cute house.
So this guy did this house? Brilliant!! Looks a lot like a house that I saw on Fixer Upper.
It is the Fixer Upper house
Yes the shotgun house is from Fixer Upper (as I mention in the text), but the rest of the houses are his idea. That's the real focus of this story are what he's trying to do with 4 houses on one lot. I like all the different styles, particularly the dogtrot house.
I said the same thing he did Not Built this house . This the same house from Fixer Upper.. 😂😆 Lol
@@kirstendirksen He seemed to be saying that the shotgun house was his idea and he had to do the logistics of moving it and everything. Was the Fixer Upper episode phony? Did they not really do all the work on that house?
So you can rent out the space with the kitchen & living room as an office space without a bathroom? And the other space with the bathroom and bedroom can be rented out as a separate apartment?
I wasn't really keen on the all brick building because I thought it was supposed to be a home and it didn't really match the other three homes he built. But after listening to him I realized he envisioned it as a commercial space. I liked his energy and kind demeanor. And it was obvious that he cared about what he built. That it wasn't just about making money.
No, i think he likes it to 'seem' like an old fashioned commercial space with an apartment above but in reality it's 2 separate apartments, he just hasn't put the back stairs in yet.
@@sorscha1308 no its one single home. Go watch the show The master bedroom, etc. are upstairs and the main living area is the first floor.
So awesome….the brick one, I thought, was old and already there. Love the tile, love the details on barn door.
ONE OF MY FAVORITE FIXER UPPER HOMES DONE BY CHIP AND JOANNA GAINES!!! ABSOLUTELY LOVE WHAT CHIP AND JOANNA DID TO PRESERVE THIS HOUSE! Fixer upper season 3
So inspiring. Would be great to team up with a landscape architect to suggest affordable solutions for providing privacy. Vines on screens, trellis, etc. Great ideas for cities like Detroit and Saginaw with a lot of small empty lots. Wish they could be proactive about building quality small homes on small lots. Not everyone wants, needs or can afford the average size house. Kudos to those who are changing the cities one creative solution at a time. And to you for telling the world about them.😊 TFS
I was thinking about Detroit, too. This looks like areas downtown and in Hamtramck.
I love how he meshes the old time look with the modern touches! Shotgun houses making a return... I never thought I'd see the day but, it makes so much sense in today's world where starter homes are needed as well as smaller living.
Chip and Joanna built the first home. Its nice to know he bought the neighboring lot.
This is like The Curse. It's the gentrifier neighborhood🤘😆
I love this! The shotgun house looks almost exactly like the one they did on the show Fixer Upper. I’m surprised the city allowed these though.
I absolutely love his idea!!!! Finally, an idea that reincorporates underutilized space and makes it function and available to all people. I love the shotgun style home. As an architect and Designer this is what I live for. Purposeful spaces how we live and in line with proper utilization.
Cameron and his wife created something amazing that revitalizes neighborhoods one street at a time. City planners and investors should get behind the Bells and expand this vision. Great job! Beautiful homes. Well done guys.
He’s so iconic. The way he has a vision and just goes along and learns along the way. It’s amazing! I love it
All of these are absolutely beautiful but I think you should screen in the dog Trot and put a screen door on it. That would make it a true dog trot house.
that's a good idea... provide cover and security for nighttime walk back and forth.
@@tailgatecarpenter26 it's not for multiple dogs it's for the person who lives there their dog or two
I love the brick loft. I would love to live in it.
Very efficient use of allotted area, great mixing up combination of aesthetics. Avoids looking homogenous and gentrified by historical nods to Waco’s urban brownstone past and the modern upgrading of the shotgun house. Well done and congratulations to this gentleman. Much respect from Fiji.🇫🇯👍😎
Absolutely love this, so proud of him for showing what can be done thoughtfully. These are beautiful. I hope his ideas are replicated throughout America. Thank you for this spotlight on something meaningful. ❤❤❤
What an inspiration! I love that this was not necessarily done with max profit in mind, but beauty and timelessness are at the top of the list. Thank you for bringing beauty to such a sterile building era.
I love how he went for all different designs. I think it's brilliant. I think these smaller homes are beautiful. They should start allowing this more. We have a lot of people who need homes.
That shotgun house sure looks like the house Chip and Joanna Gaines fixed up years ago. From top to bottom
That first house looks almost identical what Joanne and Chip Gaines renovated several years ago, including the drawbridge stairs.
It is that house
Great ideas in use here. I can imagine a small coffee shop with al fresco seating out the front in the brick building.
I love that you created a visual interest, hopefully encouraging more walking interest as well.
Courage, indeed! And look at the result. We need more folks like this to turn our urban neighborhoods around.
A balance combination of neat design and cozy. Great job.
What's lacking is commitment from local governments and imagination. This guy nailed it! This type of housing is highly desirable, doable, and practical.
I believe I saw that green house restored on a TV show some time ago.
This is actually a brilliant idea. Doesn’t have to be done in just urban environments either. So much could be done with this concept even on this small scale.
I like how the shotgun house is raised. I hope they plan on building a deck in the rear of the upper floor of the brick building, otherwise watch that first step, it's a doozy!
Creative and hard-working. It's good to see the city showing flexibility with lot dimensions and Cameron cleverly designing to take advantage of it.
This is a good one. It all works very well together, aesthetically. I need more space from folks, but I get how well it would work for community-minded people.
Love this video! Love what he's doing! On Leslie near Michigan Ave in Lansing there's a Cottage Court with I think 6 homes on 2x2 lots back to back. Take 2 of those, and 2 of these, and you turn 14 city lots into 20+ units of housing. What kills me is the "one parking spot per bedroom" which is one of the most ridiculous things I've heard. A 2-car family with 3 kids could need be 3 to 5 bedrooms, creating overparking by design, and favoring studios apartments over family dwellings. Even when a lot of things go right, American zoning law tries to kill good development.
I 100% see the goal of this lot to recreate a community that is timeless, it’s appreciating how this seems to be on everyone’s focus more and more when it comes to homes.
Great character between all the different models, love how they're arranged too. And the height does so much work making them all feel nice.
Not to pick nits, lol, but the term "shotgun house" usually has a door at the end of the house so that you could fire a shotgun at the front door and it could pass throush the house and out the back door without hitting anything. So the reference has slightly less to do with how skinny they were but the simple, long layout (and doors at both ends ;?)
I'm from AR and a "Shotgun House" is a narrow house were you can stand at the front door, look straight thru the house, and see out the back door...just like looking through the barrel of a SHOTGUN!😁
I love the brick store-front building. It reminds me of the configuration of home/shops in Detroit. Beautiful.
Man, I love what this guy is doing but how much rent is he going to have to charge to just cover his cost? He is putting a lot of quality into these units.
wouldnt hVE been cheaper just to built a new shotgun home.. other than sentimental value I cant help but think of house costly moving, new foundation, new pillars, new roof .... it basically a new home... so why start with a crack house, I admire him reusing stuff thats already here tho
You can feel the passion when he talks about his projects. I love this.
I've collected so many ideas for homes that'll never work together in a single home. This guy had the same problem and decided to just build multiple different homes to implement everything he found interesting. Solid idea.
Love his designs and wanting to stay with the old style. ❤
It really is a good message. A lot of noteworthy and respectable points and suggestions made respectfully.
Excellent creativity! Unique, small comfortable homes.
Great concept and very little grass to mow. I love it. Great vision.....kudos to you.
Cool, I live in an old wartime neighborhood and I love the charm and character of all the old little houses.
Beautiful execution! I love the variety of the spaces inside and out. This is all very inspirational.
I can't contain how excited I was to see a modern dogtrot!
Thus house was done by the Gaines several years ago on Fixer Upper.
Luv his take on building! Luv the mashup of vernacular and styles. More builders should be going this.
I remember that shotgun house from Chip and Joanna's show (back when I used to watch it). I love what they did with the house, but I love the other houses on the property a lot more. Especially the brick one. A house like that is definitely my dream home.
very creative use of a small lot. Kudos to him for creating this. A bit of imagination as a developer, shows what can be achieved...👋👋👋
I love the imagination and creativity. It doesn’t matter. If you got it from someone or else he fulfilled it he saw it and he did it. He didn’t try he did.
Finally! New buildings with the traditional look!
I like the concept of two separate units joined by a shared porch. It’s perfect for roommates, or someone with a small business who has clients come in.
Really a smart man.
Innovative.
Plus he has a happy great personality.
Love what he has done.
What a great project...I've worked in construction for three years and am trying to eventually do a first profitable project. This is in the ballpark.
Very interesting idea. I like the different buildings all within the same lots. He has a very good vision for developing.
Cool history on Dr. Pepper. His grave is located in Rural Retreat VA. We stopped there on our fall motorcycle tour last year.
Is this guy suggesting that he designed the blue shotgun house? Chip and Joanna Gaines designed this house. I watched that episode years ago. What’s going on with that? Before he even went over to it, I was telling my husband all about it and what was inside.
Just love this guy! I wish more development like this could happen and hopefully, it could be affordable. High ceilings and smaller square footage is the way to go. These kinds of neighbourhoods could reduce need for three or four cars in every driveway! and be more walkable and transit positive. Inspiring.
great work on the property --- great work on the video production
Quite eclectic and heterodox. Congratulations.
I LOVE the brick one…just gorgeous! ❤
Love the creativity in this project ,more portrait the concept of history in community living
Isn’t the shotgun house the one that Chip and Joanna Gaines did? It looks exactly like the one they did.
YES! I was like isn't that the house from fixer upper??!
Great brick house. It will be better if the brick house has more space and external areas.
This is great, and I’m stunned it’s taking so long for people to do this. There is one major flaw though, no garden space/outdoor utility etc.