@@flyingking906 it is to much money. That in this video is 109.000€ . Please look at garden houses . In Germany we have something like that for 10.000-20.000 Euro it is a garden House. A small garden House cost you 600 euro, a bigger one, 2000 euro.
This is pretty insane. This could help so many! Council approval is one of those hoops they like to try to use to block people from helping others. My mom became homeless when her husband died and I've been trying to figure out an affordable way to build a structure in my backyard for her. This would be perfect. Shes disabled so she cannot work. I have no problem with her living with me but she wants her own space which is 100% understandable.
tell ure mom to go to the Philippines....rent is $70 a month... $120 a month....$140 a month...Sunshine Shoulders utuber shows some apt & Gio in the Philippines & the Philippine Info Channel shows some houses & condos etc & they have free live streams Q &Ans ...etc all free
I live in Ireland in what is called a demountable dwelling. An upbeat caravan. It was supposed to be temporary but it is perfectly fine. WIth a sold fuel stove that heats the water, radiators etc. Owned by the Council in a remote place where no one else wanted to live. Love it!
Demountables are a thing in Australia as well. I think that VanHomes might be trying to market their products in a certain way as demountable homes have a reputation for being too warm in summer. That being said, the one demountable home that my family lived in briefly didn't have that issue at all.
Can I please move to Ireland? Australia sucks now. Local councils play God here, we can’t do anything. And our homelessness problem is growing worse everyday. Particularly for older women who stayed home to raise their children (so they don’t have much Superannuation saved). I’m in that category. Poor old ladies in their 70’s, living in tents or their cars 😢. Where I’m temporarily living in Victoria, there’s a huge rental shortage but we we’re not ‘allowed’ to live in a caravan in someone’s backyards for more than 12 months (and that’s IF they approve it with a permit). Caravan parks are closing down and the ones that are left have decades long waiting lists OR only allow part-time holiday living (not permanent). If you have some money, you CAN buy cheap land in the middle of nowhere but then they won’t ‘allow’ us to put a tiny house or a caravan on it 🤦🏻♀️. And the councils only approve granny flats and bungalows in backyards if you can meet all their ridiculously stringent rules, which many can’t. *And that’s if you have friends or family with a backyard they are willing to share. The waiting list for public housing in my area is also 25 YEARS PLUS!? And on top of all that, if you end up living in your car or van, that’s illegal here too 🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️. Just having basic/shelter, a roof over your head shouldn’t be this hard (especially for the most vulnerable people) 😢 #TheWholeDamnSystemIsWrong
this is pretty cool, funny how we live in a society where we have to be really sneaky and roam the grey areas of the rule book just to have a shelter over our heads.
local government has way way to much say over what we do on our own land.If we aren't hurting anyone or being destructive as far as I'm concerned council can fuck off
I really hope this becomes a thing in the future, I would love to see this in world use and no one was ever homeless ❤️ or had to live in less than housing because of financial status.
Yep!!! When I was in my late teens I lived in a nice caravan park in Adelaide in a cabin. Had toilet and a shower and I used a camping washing machine. All I ever needed
Anything to avoid a system that just drags you through a red tape nightmare and makes accommodating yourself or family a financial and logistical nightmare...well done guys
@@lucyloose2841 please can you explain what you totally mean. I don't understand this. And I hope really that you can tell me. So that I know more information. Please tell me. I am from Germany and turkey. I live in the 2 places. My brother can come to Australia to work. By prosecur. That is why I will and must know more about Australia and what you mean. Please tell me. Thank you
@@celloallo4968 in Australia we have councils that manage alot of our country and they dictate alot of, if not just about everything you can build on your own private land...there a bit like a legal mafia that you need permission from and have to pay.
So many comments regarding council approval. These guys have done their homework and if u listen to what they said - if you're in NSW you're sweet. Check with your council beforehand and see if it fits the criteria, and certain things can be customised to suit requirements. Pretty simple! As someone who has done this on a smaller scale (a third this size) and built to satisfy local council, I'm impressed how well they've streamlined it - both the council compliance side of things and the physical design. Every stage has been thought out and simplified so it's easy at the customers end. To see how quickly it assembled, how easy they've made it to connect services, and how large and open the space is once it's set up is seriously impressive. If u haven't physically gone through this process yourself I dont think u can appreciate how clever this is. Unreal, that's a real Aussie approach to affordable housing. Legend effort.
You don't actually own it, since you pay land rights taxes, you just own the right to reside on and pay taxes for that land. When you sell it you hand over your deed to the land residency right to another serf who will have to pay taxes to the nobility into perpetuity. Failure to pay taxes leads to eviction and confiscation of land.
Why wouldn’t Vic councils approve it, it’s for a family member to live in on your property, you can get a council home in Vic put in your backyard for the very same reasons
@@VanHomes What you dont tell people.. its only legal with exemptions, If that is on your property longer then 3 years youll be in trouble.. But I no doubt know you dont tell people that to make sales.
My grandma got one like this here in NZ except on wheels, so it's a two bedroom house (with really nice wood finishings) but because it's built 'on wheels' it counts as a caravan and not a home. You absolutely wouldn't know though, when you walk inside (and from the outside) it looks exactly like a house! :D
I'm not sure whether it's a national or local requirement but here in the Wanganui District, if you connect to plumbing or electricity (other than by an extension cord) it's deemed to be a building as well as a vehicle and requires a permit. I'm pretty sure you wouldn't get away with the fact that it's more than 30sqm once extended, either. If I'm wrong, I'd love to be corrected as we'd love to be able to get something like this!
@@Mr3kiwis - hi there!! My grandma and grandad have a generator for their electricity which they only turn on the evenings for a little while. They have some solar power and also gas for cooking etc. Their water comes from a tank on the roof, and they are not connected to sewage because they have a composting toilet - I think that's how they got around those regulations? They are on the West Coast of the South Island so regulations could also be different there as it's so isolated, they're out in the bush about an hours drive out of Greymouth :) I hope you can eventually find a solution that works for you so you can eventually have something similar :D
It's a shame that here in the UK that we have too many restrictions that would allow this as it would be a great way of helping to relieve the serious housing problem that we have here
Being in Scotland it's the wind I'd be worried about, but this would be amazing for young families if they can find land to purchase or rent , I'd love this
This is incredible. Imagine having a few of these on a property with a couple of mates and their families, split the cost of the vans and land amongst everyone, especially somewhere like that, looks amazing 👌
Great concept to have in the US and not deal with the pain and inconvenience of permitting specially in rural areas, why do I have to cash out thousands of dollars if I want to put anything I want in my property of 100 acres. Well done.
er, homesteaders and tiny home enthusiasts have been using/abusing the "travel trailer" exemptions for years in the US. Pretty much all tiny homes either sits on a trailer base or its a houseboat format. There are a lot of reasons town/cities get into restricting builds and have zoning departments. Some good, some bad.
@@joecollins1823 really im in Henderson!! Disabled with cancer and i have a 15 yr old son so i can't move into a low housing for Disabled. My enrire disabilty check goes to rent. This would be amazing for me.
Damn councils have too much power. I had to pay council fees of $50/year, just to stay in my own caravan on my own bush property! Never again will l ever tell these thieving councils anything!!
YEAH I AGREE Council's are given too much power, They are the bottom feeders It blows me away how they they can actually demand $50 payment from you for your own caravan on your own block of land I mean $50 isn't a lot of money, But it's the principal of it, It's like they just had to get money from you NO MATTER WHAT COUNCILS really are just LOWEST OF LOW MONEY GRABBING ORGANISATION .
My council wants to charge $100 per year for a shipping container on my farm because i didnt want to go through council to build a shed. Got a 20ft container instead. They want $100 per year.
How do you manage to that .I was going to buy land in Wales and live in a caravan but was told by councils that they wouldn't allow it.stuck with a house now. But would still like to do it
Sounds like council needs to be on a short leash, much like America's zoning boards - code enforcement! People need to live and have safe, affordable housing; the bureaucrats need to leave!
@Jo D look at California. Mass exodus of poor and middle class, middle income ppl. They flee because they can't afford to live there. SO many homeless ppl- and they work! Some have 2 jobs! The bureaucrats are rich and they want everyone else to leave. They soon won't have anyone to pump their gas , clean their pools, clean their houses, be their receptionists at their doctor offices, or fix their cars, etc.
@@ilovehorses5714 I had to leave the the area where I lived and loved being because I couldn't afford to buy a house in 5hat area because house prices have gone crazy.ive had to move to a cheaper area where area 300 miles away where I know no one and now have have no social life whatsoever.
He says multiple times 'you don't need council approval' which is true for the building IF there is already an existing building AND there are usually restrictions on being able to actually live in it. A grey area that is difficult to enforce but if you have a council with to much time on their hands? Definitely something to consider given their purchase price and then time and money involved should you have to move it. Don't get me wrong though, there has never been a better time to raise hell against money grabbing council restrictions and your basic right to some affordable shelter.
Hi, thank you for your comment and support for people's basic right to affordable shelter. In late 2018 VanHomes with one of its customer challenged a NSW Council in the Land & Environment Court resulting in a precedent be set clarifying "the grey area" that a member of the household of an existing dwelling on the property can permanently live in a caravan (the granny flat) without council approval.
@@VanHomes Congrats, hopefully the example makes it easier for others in the future asI know there are lots of councils that are just not open to it....
A friend has a tiny home. She found that many councils have time limitations regarding vans and tiny homes etc. Basically she has to fly under their radar.
Hi Ken, Outside of NSW this is the case, however in NSW there is a statewide exemption for caravans that applies to every council. You can check it out here: bit.ly/3cjn4Gz
@@VanHomes Your talking about exemption b which requires the owner of the van also be the owner of the land, and the occupier be a member of the household. That's a very specific case and the one you actually site. You are technically correct in that specific case. It's just not the case for a lot of people wishing to do this. "(b) the installation of not more than one caravan or campervan on land occupied by the owner of the caravan or campervan in connection with that owner’s dwelling-house, so long as it is used for habitation only by the owner or by members of the owner’s household and is maintained in a safe and healthy condition, or"
@@kenwebster5053 Yes that's correct, this video documents that this customer did not need council approval for her intended use, which falls under clause (b) A very large number of our clients use our product under this exemption, which is why we document that it can in fact be done as it's not currently a well-known exemption.
@@VanHomes alarm bells are ringing big time when you have to use loop holes in legislation. Legislation changes all the time. People honesty is questioned. I will say the houses do look nice tho. Don't think this will work. Just get council approval, get your own land and build a container home. Reason I look at this is because I live in NQ. block of land you can own for 80k near the beach. I know NSW is a different can of worms. I'm originally from Sydney and it's way overpriced it's a joke.
Beautiful guy's well done Council's are a pain in the butt to deal with at the best of time's...I love this idea I hope your business goes from strength to strength 💜
What an amazing piece of technology - I think this would have global appeal in so many parts of the world... congrats to you guys who developed this....T
@@sophiajoyceferry7150 Yes, most of the Republic of Panama. You just need the nod from a local architect. But since you are not actually architecting anything here, the architect would just need to ensure it is safe and structurally sound but mostly that the foundation upon which you plan to erect it is sufficiently sound to withstand it's weight for the duration of it's permanence. All of these things require a fraction of the red tape a Council usually requires. th-cam.com/channels/di9MNEDRtJY4mpVSolRfjA.htmlvideos?view=0&sort=dd
I live in oz and have been seriously thinking about off grid living/tiny houses/domes etc anything that i can afford to set up as my retirement come closer and closer, this is a fantastic alternative thanks..
These days, with the way our usual weather patterns seem to be drifting southward, I'd be putting some effert in "wind safeing" that sail.. In some parts of NSW, i'd even go so far as pin down to around Cat4-5 cyclone winds.. just me. and my 2c worth. Nice idea people.. looks pretty awesome :)
Perfect size for me as a holiday house/cabin, and perfect size for a family of 4, without feeling claustrophobic, as you do with a regular holiday cabins.
What a wonderful idea! We need this in the US. Almost impossible to find affordable housing here these days. Believe me, I know. I'm a quasi-homeless couch surfing granny stuck in COVID-19 Eviction Moratorium limbo. Even with a solid rent payment history, my "income isn't high enough to qualify" for what little housing is out there. What I could do with this and a quarter acre lot on the edge of town.
With that inspiring attitutude you have, you have got to find a way to get what you want. And I like your limbo description as a quasi-homeless couch surfing granny stuck in corella 19 eviction moratorium limbo. :)
@@beginnerprepper4951 you most likely do, and probably cheaper as well. Try looking around on the net. Australia is a fairly high manufacturing cost country & the price of this is not particularly cheap.
Council approvals are not difficult if you comply with the building standards and use a private certifier. A 4m W x 7m L x 3m H Titan shed on slab with water, plumbing, electricity, insulation, plastered walls etc can be completed for under $20k
Hi Paul, you are very correct that Council approvals are not difficult to obtain if you comply with the Council rules. This is what makes VanHomes so attractive, it complies with the Council rules as we proved in the Land & Environment Court in late 2018. The shed option is definitely a much cheaper option and is very easy to get Council or Private Certifier approval to build. Once you add water, electricity, insulation, plaster the walls etc they would be quite comfortable to live in. However, the Council and private certifiers give approval on sheds easier than they do on a home based on that Sheds are "a Class 10 Building" and under Australian Building codes, a Class 10 Building is non-habitable. This means living in a shed would technically be illegal even though you have the approval to build it.
Councils are lazy corruptible and salary piglets so people will find a way to live how they want especially since their money and property . Councils have way too much power over citizens life’s in their own homes .
I’m glad I live where we have no bylaws, no building inspectors, no local government. We just have the essentials. Recreation, community Center, roads board and a fire department. Don’t need anything else.
That design has been around for a long time. It is still a great setup and with modern materials are likely great to spend time in. We used to call them box fold camps as we dragged them all over the Canadian far north, often mounted on Nodwell tracked trailers. Same setup complete with the poles to tilt up and hold the roof panels while folding out the rest of the box. Much more utilitarian fit and finish though with basic smallish windows and doors with metal sheathing exterior. The central section held kitchen, washroom, utilities and furnace and we lived very well indeed. Solid and weather proof and pretty bear proof as well, though we had a couple of occasions sitting at supper and feeling the building shake as a bear stood up and shoved on the sidewall. Nice to see it modernized and made fit for urban living.
@@VeronicaGorositoMusic Oh yes indeed and a good reminder about how great the buildings were compared to the tents we often used. While the hierarchy of yikes goes up from Black Bears through Grizzlies to Polar Bears depending on where you are it is best to not mess with any of them if you can help it. Solid walls get a thumbs up from me lol.
Here in the UK after WW2 we built temporary emergency housing called "Prefabs" intended for 10 years usage, now 76 years later the ones in my town are still housing new generations of happy families. Cheaply built in a hurry does not mean they can't be good and appreciated. I'm a big advocate of practicality and diversity of options, after all people's needs are rarely identical to anyone else's.
We'd never get away with this in the UK. Planning laws; Legal requirements of electrical installations without approval; mains water systems metered on many houses; We even have rules that deny some home owners to keep a caravan on their property/driveway as it can violate the rules of the Deeds of the property. Then there's objections to plans to dump something that takes away a neighbour''s view or blocks their light - it's a minefield.
Top idea. I see a lot of comments about council approval, but given current housing supply issues, I suspect we may see things made easier for people wanting to adopt the tiny home/portable approach. Unfortunately in NSW, many councils have approval rules that prevent this being a permanent style of living. Might not need approval for a caravan, but usually it can only be used as a prime residence for a temporary period. Stupid laws because there is nothing stopping anyone from living year-round in a mobile home, as long as they move site as required.
I love that there is a door to outside right there in the crapper. You can watch mother nature, air out the stench, and enjoy a cup of coffee all while you evacuate your bowels. That's the life!
What do you do around the base of the of the Van Home to stop cold air, and hide the metal? Do you install some sort of skirting with ummm insulation board to keep the Van Home floors warm in the winter??? Nice VanHome for sure great thinking out of the box on this one!!! God's blessings. Beautiful home.
As a granny who needs a flat, waiting 9 years for public housing is a poor option.A friend has land, now I just need a lotto win to buy this perfect solution. Good one, men.
Absolutely love the way the home is made. So quick and easy to set up. New thing's they come up with to make our lives so much easier. Gorgeous home as well!
@@KathleenEdge yep, if they make you pay to live there, you're a renter, nothing more. Believe me, I own some land and it is a real pisser I gotta pay a bunch of bureaucrats to keep it.
@@sid2112 I bitch at every town meeting I can about having to pay for things I have never used. I even had a lawyer draw up a document saying I wouldn't call the fire dept. if my house was on fire, what do they do but douse it with water, I can do that. Why do I have to pay school taxes for somebody else's kids? I burn, compost or recycle all my trash, what am I paying for? I don't use their water, I have a well. It's like paying protection money to thugs in the old days, legally enforced theft and it's BS.
@Konstantin M ok wait I get hating taxes but calling people dumb, slow or cattle because they pay them is way off base. First off taxes suck everyone hates them but then when a pot hole arises in your neighborhood your probably the first one to call, if a fire breaks out and nobody paid taxes that fire not only burns down your house but the whole damn neighborhood or hell the town. So some people don't use all the services but all people use some of the services guaranteed ,fire garbage, water, (power ok this one can be private in most cases), streets, schools, paved ROADS, infrastructure, law enforcement, governments
Great idea, only thing is the price of land in the Northern Rivers. And what is either approval as long as there's an existing residence on the property?
This is a beautiful home well done for the design and final product but can you please tell us a price range perhaps the cheapest.I understand it would vary .
Hi there, we have VanHomes in Byron Shire, as well as Hawkesbury and majority of NSW Councils. Feel free to give us a call and we can explain in more detail. You do not need approval as long as there is a dwelling as per the Legislation in NSW. You can read all about it here: www.vanhomes.com.au/your-council-bypass/
Great concept and excellent video! Boxabl is doing the same sort of thing on a smaller scale in the US….don’t know what the zone restrictions are, tho. These types of units are the answer to housing problems in lotsof places, I believe.
In Victoria you can't live full time in a caravan except in a caravan park. I don't know about other States, but the video is misleading. Do your research, folks!
@Michael Saint you can’t do it in NSW either. Local government act regulation 389, you cannot live in a caravan on land that is not an approved caravan park for more than two consecutive days and no more than 60 days in a year. That’s if this is registrable as a caravan. If not it’s a transportable building subject to approvals.
@Michael Saint you’d be surprised. Mostly it’s neighbours who will dob you in, I know people who have been caught out because someone applying for development approval used them as an example of comparable development. My local council was using aerial imagery to track unapproved use of shipping containers (which are class 7 buildings requiring approval). It’s at your own risk, but councils know more than you think they do.
We need this in California. We cant build anything on our own land $100k in permits and plans alone. Plus the land Comes out to over $250,000+ And still no home yet
@@TH-cam_user3333 I bought land, lived in a tent for 6 months trying to get council approval to build a kit home and garage. Then I lived in a garden shed (f-ing hot in summer) for 6 months while I built the 5 car garage, I now live in it. And I'm gambling my house money on Bitcoin atm:)
@@r1yamahamini I’ve been homeless before and looked into all manner of accommodation. Unfortunately this government priorities investors over first home owners. Local councils are just as bad. You basically have to blackmail them to put up a fence. I’ve seen this type of stuff first hand. The growth in homelessness is a result of increased rents and bullshit house prices. Hope things turn out well for you.
yep! and if they cannot they will simply Change the rules or make new ones! less than 25million people in the entire Australian lands and we have unaffordable housing prices! its a complete joke
In launceston the police come around and without trial you get life imprisonment. While youre in prison eating the rotten food they will charge you to pull the thing down and disposal fees at the local tip.
Hi Baz, We have been using this Legislation to help Australians out since 2008. Councils do not make the legislation, State Government does. They actually changed the law last year - but changed it to include bushfire victims as part of the exemption! You can read about it here: bit.ly/3joDxNC Thanks :)
Build them in USA .... Many people here want affordable homes to live off grid .... add solar panels to roof & it would fit needs of many !!!
Costing price plz
There are plenty of tiny home manufacturers in the US.
@@flyingking906 pricing is in the description, takes you to a new web page
@@flyingking906 it is to much money. That in this video is 109.000€ . Please look at garden houses . In Germany we have something like that for 10.000-20.000 Euro it is a garden House. A small garden House cost you 600 euro, a bigger one, 2000 euro.
@@celloallo4968 our prices are in AUD - $109,000 = $69,000€.
In Germany there are less restrictions on building zones like Australia has.
This is pretty insane. This could help so many! Council approval is one of those hoops they like to try to use to block people from helping others. My mom became homeless when her husband died and I've been trying to figure out an affordable way to build a structure in my backyard for her. This would be perfect. Shes disabled so she cannot work. I have no problem with her living with me but she wants her own space which is 100% understandable.
Good luck with building a nice place for your mum. I hope everything works out for you both.
I agree, these caravan granny flats are awesome
Lakario Davis+ So kind of you! I pray you get everything you need to get it done quickly and cheaply.
❤
tell ure mom to go to the Philippines....rent is $70 a month... $120 a month....$140 a month...Sunshine Shoulders utuber shows some apt & Gio in the Philippines & the Philippine Info Channel shows some houses & condos etc & they have free live streams Q &Ans ...etc all free
I live in Ireland in what is called a demountable dwelling. An upbeat caravan. It was supposed to be temporary but it is perfectly fine. WIth a sold fuel stove that heats the water, radiators etc. Owned by the Council in a remote place where no one else wanted to live. Love it!
your own land correct seems to be impossible to dio in the uk ireland let you live here full, time without prsmission?
Demountables are a thing in Australia as well. I think that VanHomes might be trying to market their products in a certain way as demountable homes have a reputation for being too warm in summer. That being said, the one demountable home that my family lived in briefly didn't have that issue at all.
Can I please move to Ireland? Australia sucks now. Local councils play God here, we can’t do anything. And our homelessness problem is growing worse everyday. Particularly for older women who stayed home to raise their children (so they don’t have much Superannuation saved). I’m in that category. Poor old ladies in their 70’s, living in tents or their cars 😢. Where I’m temporarily living in Victoria, there’s a huge rental shortage but we we’re not ‘allowed’ to live in a caravan in someone’s backyards for more than 12 months (and that’s IF they approve it with a permit). Caravan parks are closing down and the ones that are left have decades long waiting lists OR only allow part-time holiday living (not permanent). If you have some money, you CAN buy cheap land in the middle of nowhere but then they won’t ‘allow’ us to put a tiny house or a caravan on it 🤦🏻♀️. And the councils only approve granny flats and bungalows in backyards if you can meet all their ridiculously stringent rules, which many can’t. *And that’s if you have friends or family with a backyard they are willing to share. The waiting list for public housing in my area is also 25 YEARS PLUS!? And on top of all that, if you end up living in your car or van, that’s illegal here too 🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️. Just having basic/shelter, a roof over your head shouldn’t be this hard (especially for the most vulnerable people) 😢 #TheWholeDamnSystemIsWrong
sounds fantastic! Go Ireland!!
@@traceycrawford9938can I come with you?
this is pretty cool, funny how we live in a society where we have to be really sneaky and roam the grey areas of the rule book just to have a shelter over our heads.
local government has way way to much say over what we do on our own land.If we aren't hurting anyone or being destructive as far as I'm concerned council can fuck off
I really hope this becomes a thing in the future, I would love to see this in world use and no one was ever homeless ❤️ or had to live in less than housing because of financial status.
Hi beautiful
How are you doing?
the older i get, i see things like that and say to myself..thats all i really need..
Smart i say
All you need is a sprinter van home
Yep!!! When I was in my late teens I lived in a nice caravan park in Adelaide in a cabin. Had toilet and a shower and I used a camping washing machine. All I ever needed
In agreement 👍🏼👍🏼
@Tony F
Ah gotcha
Yes. Van life with dogs could be tricky
Anything to avoid a system that just drags you through a red tape nightmare and makes accommodating yourself or family a financial and logistical nightmare...well done guys
@Sharon Keith that would do me...except when we get 980ml of rain like recently lol
@@lucyloose2841 please can you explain what you totally mean. I don't understand this. And I hope really that you can tell me. So that I know more information. Please tell me. I am from Germany and turkey. I live in the 2 places. My brother can come to Australia to work. By prosecur. That is why I will and must know more about Australia and what you mean. Please tell me. Thank you
@@celloallo4968 in Australia we have councils that manage alot of our country and they dictate alot of, if not just about everything you can build on your own private land...there a bit like a legal mafia that you need permission from and have to pay.
@@lucyloose2841 thank you for your answer
@@lucyloose2841 no better here in the States, in some states it’s illegal to collect rain water!
So many comments regarding council approval. These guys have done their homework and if u listen to what they said - if you're in NSW you're sweet. Check with your council beforehand and see if it fits the criteria, and certain things can be customised to suit requirements. Pretty simple!
As someone who has done this on a smaller scale (a third this size) and built to satisfy local council, I'm impressed how well they've streamlined it - both the council compliance side of things and the physical design. Every stage has been thought out and simplified so it's easy at the customers end. To see how quickly it assembled, how easy they've made it to connect services, and how large and open the space is once it's set up is seriously impressive. If u haven't physically gone through this process yourself I dont think u can appreciate how clever this is. Unreal, that's a real Aussie approach to affordable housing. Legend effort.
yep agree - all relates to your council so check with YOUR concil and these guys to see if it can happen
Betcha they change those rules real soon.
@@lideabarker8161 They've had 13 years.
Yep, as long as there is an existing dwelling on your property for the 'overflow' of people.
If you have the land who owns you ? You pay rates, well shut your mouth and get on with living. Neighbor are a problem at times.
I don’t think councils would allow this in Victoria. It’s ridiculous how much input they have on land WE OWN
You don't actually own it, since you pay land rights taxes, you just own the right to reside on and pay taxes for that land. When you sell it you hand over your deed to the land residency right to another serf who will have to pay taxes to the nobility into perpetuity. Failure to pay taxes leads to eviction and confiscation of land.
Why wouldn’t Vic councils approve it, it’s for a family member to live in on your property, you can get a council home in Vic put in your backyard for the very same reasons
@@sharonjones6783 There are very strict rules for putting a council granny flat on a property too.
@Tracey Crawford
Do you know how tall the ceilings are to this VanHome because my height is 6"4.
@@chiraqhanns6952 I don’t know, sorry
Problem I have is if my neighbours saw this just appear in my backyard they would immediately report me to council.
Depends on where you are based - this is legal in NSW.
www.vanhomes.com.au/your-council-bypass
What about Queensland (sunshine coast council)?
@@poetwarriordad probably be a yes with exceptions. I only say this cause aren't they kicking all the houseboats off the river??
A little fireworks accident may change your nosey neighbors point of view .
@@VanHomes What you dont tell people.. its only legal with exemptions, If that is on your property longer then 3 years youll be in trouble.. But I no doubt know you dont tell people that to make sales.
My grandma got one like this here in NZ except on wheels, so it's a two bedroom house (with really nice wood finishings) but because it's built 'on wheels' it counts as a caravan and not a home. You absolutely wouldn't know though, when you walk inside (and from the outside) it looks exactly like a house! :D
Where did she get hers from ? And what part of NZ does she live in 😊
I want one!! I want it to be 1700sq feet. And i want it to be built in the jungles of fiji.
I'm not sure whether it's a national or local requirement but here in the Wanganui District, if you connect to plumbing or electricity (other than by an extension cord) it's deemed to be a building as well as a vehicle and requires a permit. I'm pretty sure you wouldn't get away with the fact that it's more than 30sqm once extended, either. If I'm wrong, I'd love to be corrected as we'd love to be able to get something like this!
@@Mr3kiwis - hi there!! My grandma and grandad have a generator for their electricity which they only turn on the evenings for a little while. They have some solar power and also gas for cooking etc. Their water comes from a tank on the roof, and they are not connected to sewage because they have a composting toilet - I think that's how they got around those regulations? They are on the West Coast of the South Island so regulations could also be different there as it's so isolated, they're out in the bush about an hours drive out of Greymouth :)
I hope you can eventually find a solution that works for you so you can eventually have something similar :D
This one is on wheels too, like he said, it is registered as a Caravan.
It's a shame that here in the UK that we have too many restrictions that would allow this as it would be a great way of helping to relieve the serious housing problem that we have here
Its that way all over.. id love to find a van dweller to share with.
@@cherriemckinstry131 Me too
The book "Field to Farm" shows how you can make a barn liveable without planning permission.
Its alot colder in UK needing way thicker insulation & double / triple glazing
Being in Scotland it's the wind I'd be worried about, but this would be amazing for young families if they can find land to purchase or rent , I'd love this
This is incredible. Imagine having a few of these on a property with a couple of mates and their families, split the cost of the vans and land amongst everyone, especially somewhere like that, looks amazing 👌
Register the property as a caravan park, that is one way around restrictive laws.
David Not Solomon Does that have any higher on going costs, as it would be seen as a business land?
This isn't affordable at all... Might as well just buy a mobile home.. or even a camper at half the price
Then the drama starts! Believe me, it gets tried a lot and it always ends up like that.
Awesome!!
Great concept to have in the US and not deal with the pain and inconvenience of permitting specially in rural areas, why do I have to cash out thousands of dollars if I want to put anything I want in my property of 100 acres. Well done.
Yeah I can’t wrap my head around how they can tell us what to build on our own land. Corruption at its best.
Some parts of usa have rule against having RV in one’s own home , least my neighborhood does (HOA) .
er, homesteaders and tiny home enthusiasts have been using/abusing the "travel trailer" exemptions for years in the US. Pretty much all tiny homes either sits on a trailer base or its a houseboat format.
There are a lot of reasons town/cities get into restricting builds and have zoning departments. Some good, some bad.
@@Rosesraspberries72 because it's not your land. You just lease it from the government. Want proof? Don't pay your yearly lease fee, ie property taxes
@@zebfox011 yeah the fuckers would take it away.
I sure would like to find something like this in the USA
Boxabl - currently building a plant in Las Vegas
@@joecollins1823 really im in Henderson!! Disabled with cancer and i have a 15 yr old son so i can't move into a low housing for Disabled. My enrire disabilty check goes to rent. This would be amazing for me.
This is basically a kickstarter. Like 90% of kickstarters never deliver anything to the public. I wouldn't put your hopes in this
@@tschoppet boxable had a three year waiting list and aren't actually manufacturing much...
@@thisismylovehandle I would have thought they were increasing production, especially with the nod from Elon Musk ...
I don't live in Australia, and I don't need a Granny Flat. But still enjoyed the video :)
Damn councils have too much power. I had to pay council fees of $50/year, just to stay in my own caravan on my own bush property!
Never again will l ever tell these thieving councils anything!!
YEAH I AGREE
Council's are given too much power, They are
the bottom feeders
It blows me away how they they can actually demand $50 payment from you for your own caravan on your own block of land
I mean $50 isn't a lot of money, But it's the principal of it, It's like they just had to get money from you NO MATTER WHAT
COUNCILS really are just LOWEST OF LOW MONEY GRABBING ORGANISATION .
In US,NY state I pay 5000 dollars per year to stay on my own land....property tax !!
$1 a week.
Fuck.
The injustice.
@D Chapo It was sarcasm mate, $1 a week and he's whining.
My council wants to charge $100 per year for a shipping container on my farm because i didnt want to go through council to build a shed. Got a 20ft container instead. They want $100 per year.
I see so many attempts at 're-inventing a caravan.
I live in a caravan, UK. Best decision ever.
How do you manage to that .I was going to buy land in Wales and live in a caravan but was told by councils that they wouldn't allow it.stuck with a house now. But would still like to do it
It's beautiful but let's be honest, this type is suitable only between subtropics , in temperate zone the draft in winter is gonna kill you.
Sounds like council needs to be on a short leash, much like America's zoning boards - code enforcement! People need to live and have safe, affordable housing; the bureaucrats need to leave!
@Jo D Yeah. The rich want to control everything. What's new, right?
@Jo D look at California. Mass exodus of poor and middle class, middle income ppl. They flee because they can't afford to live there. SO many homeless ppl- and they work! Some have 2 jobs! The bureaucrats are rich and they want everyone else to leave. They soon won't have anyone to pump their gas , clean their pools, clean their houses, be their receptionists at their doctor offices, or fix their cars, etc.
@@ilovehorses5714 I had to leave the the area where I lived and loved being because I couldn't afford to buy a house in 5hat area because house prices have gone crazy.ive had to move to a cheaper area where area 300 miles away where I know no one and now have have no social life whatsoever.
Where are the compliant toadies..
@@bobcummings154 destruction of community by community bloodsuckers...win.
Im glad we have these homes in Australia. 👍
Hi Rebecca
You got a cute name. Lol
He says multiple times 'you don't need council approval' which is true for the building IF there is already an existing building AND there are usually restrictions on being able to actually live in it. A grey area that is difficult to enforce but if you have a council with to much time on their hands? Definitely something to consider given their purchase price and then time and money involved should you have to move it. Don't get me wrong though, there has never been a better time to raise hell against money grabbing council restrictions and your basic right to some affordable shelter.
Hi, thank you for your comment and support for people's basic right to affordable shelter. In late 2018 VanHomes with one of its customer challenged a NSW Council in the Land & Environment Court resulting in a precedent be set clarifying "the grey area" that a member of the household of an existing dwelling on the property can permanently live in a caravan (the granny flat) without council approval.
@@VanHomes Congrats, hopefully the example makes it easier for others in the future asI know there are lots of councils that are just not open to it....
Well done! Just read this response
So no council permit required for the extra drainage connections? That'd be odd.
@@VanHomes does this also apply to QLD? And what does a flat like this cost, incl delivery etc as seen in this clip?
A friend has a tiny home. She found that many councils have time limitations regarding vans and tiny homes etc. Basically she has to fly under their radar.
Hi Ken,
Outside of NSW this is the case, however in NSW there is a statewide exemption for caravans that applies to every council.
You can check it out here:
bit.ly/3cjn4Gz
@@VanHomes Your talking about exemption b which requires the owner of the van also be the owner of the land, and the occupier be a member of the household. That's a very specific case and the one you actually site. You are technically correct in that specific case. It's just not the case for a lot of people wishing to do this.
"(b) the installation of not more than one caravan or campervan on land occupied by the owner of the caravan or campervan in connection with that owner’s dwelling-house, so long as it is used for habitation only by the owner or by members of the owner’s household and is maintained in a safe and healthy condition, or"
@@kenwebster5053 Yes that's correct, this video documents that this customer did not need council approval for her intended use, which falls under clause (b)
A very large number of our clients use our product under this exemption, which is why we document that it can in fact be done as it's not currently a well-known exemption.
@@VanHomes alarm bells are ringing big time when you have to use loop holes in legislation.
Legislation changes all the time. People honesty is questioned.
I will say the houses do look nice tho.
Don't think this will work.
Just get council approval, get your own land and build a container home.
Reason I look at this is because I live in NQ. block of land you can own for 80k near the beach.
I know NSW is a different can of worms. I'm originally from Sydney and it's way overpriced it's a joke.
@@VanHomes How did this get hooked up to sewerage? Without that, it’s not a “granny flat” it’s just a sleepout.
It’s gorgeous and such a nice idea for elderly parents
I would consider pre-laid anchor points in the pad in high wind zones.
Hi John,
Great idea! We do advise this for customers in high wind areas, all VanHomes come with tie-down points around our base and roof line.
Beautiful guy's well done Council's are a pain in the butt to deal with at the best of time's...I love this idea I hope your business goes from strength to strength 💜
Hi Anne
How are you doing?
What an amazing piece of technology - I think this would have global appeal in so many parts of the world... congrats to you guys who developed this....T
Wish we had these in the US. That is a really nice home.
That looks nice enough to consider moving it and placing it even in a location where a Council doesn't even exist!
Is there such a place .
@@sophiajoyceferry7150 Yes, most of the Republic of Panama. You just need the nod from a local architect. But since you are not actually architecting anything here, the architect would just need to ensure it is safe and structurally sound but mostly that the foundation upon which you plan to erect it is sufficiently sound to withstand it's weight for the duration of it's permanence.
All of these things require a fraction of the red tape a Council usually requires. th-cam.com/channels/di9MNEDRtJY4mpVSolRfjA.htmlvideos?view=0&sort=dd
I live in oz and have been seriously thinking about off grid living/tiny houses/domes etc anything that i can afford to set up as my retirement come closer and closer, this is a fantastic alternative thanks..
I have a better idea... Move to SE Asia and rent!
Paper less construction Love it !
Could say that again “No council approval “! Thanks
Yes!!
Exactly my idea 💡
This is my tiny house idea someone brought it to life.
This is so Cool
Great design and good thinking, anything that cuts red tape and costs and lets you get on with life is a bonus!
These days, with the way our usual weather patterns seem to be drifting southward, I'd be putting some effert in "wind safeing" that sail.. In some parts of NSW, i'd even go so far as pin down to around Cat4-5 cyclone winds.. just me. and my 2c worth. Nice idea people.. looks pretty awesome :)
I’d be more than happy with it.. brilliant idea..
I love loopholes! Great looking product! Well done
Amazing that the whole building Comes out of a trailer.
I suspect that you'd get pretty cold in one of those in winter, but otherwise a really clever, innovative set up. Well done guys!
Hi Bob,
These are quite well insulated, and with a split-system A/C they stay nice and warm.
Interesting, I did something similar 40 years ago for a company here in the North Eastern USA. But I like yours much more compact
Perfect size for me as a holiday house/cabin, and perfect size for a family of 4, without feeling claustrophobic, as you do with a regular holiday cabins.
Great design and clear, no bullshit run down of what is/isn’t required.
Hope this venture goes well mate.
Nice! Beautiful area of Aussie bush there too - cheers from New Zealand!
Great work guys, covering all the bases especially those council permits!
This would be my perfect house. I wish it was available in the UK.
I think the nearest we could get in UK is a cabin made from containers!
What a wonderful idea! We need this in the US. Almost impossible to find affordable housing here these days. Believe me, I know. I'm a quasi-homeless couch surfing granny stuck in COVID-19 Eviction Moratorium limbo. Even with a solid rent payment history, my "income isn't high enough to qualify" for what little housing is out there. What I could do with this and a quarter acre lot on the edge of town.
You’d still have to pay for it, and a place to put it.
@Yvonne
So buy a RV then.
With that inspiring attitutude you have, you have got to find a way to get what you want. And I like your limbo description as a quasi-homeless couch surfing granny stuck in corella 19 eviction moratorium limbo. :)
Wow!!!! Great for seniors too!!!!
Even the white horse looked impressed
🦄✅👍😅
Ahahaahaaa, He looked SO impressed
Although he OR she could of thought they were erecting a new Stable for he/she
🤭
LOL
Wish we had something like this in USA
@@beginnerprepper4951 you most likely do, and probably cheaper as well. Try looking around on the net. Australia is a fairly high manufacturing cost country & the price of this is not particularly cheap.
G'day from Ireland, mates! Not shabby AT ALL!
Council approvals are not difficult if you comply with the building standards and use a private certifier. A 4m W x 7m L x 3m H Titan shed on slab with water, plumbing, electricity, insulation, plastered walls etc can be completed for under $20k
Hi Paul, you are very correct that Council approvals are not difficult to obtain if you comply with the Council rules. This is what makes VanHomes so attractive, it complies with the Council rules as we proved in the Land & Environment Court in late 2018. The shed option is definitely a much cheaper option and is very easy to get Council or Private Certifier approval to build. Once you add water, electricity, insulation, plaster the walls etc they would be quite comfortable to live in. However, the Council and private certifiers give approval on sheds easier than they do on a home based on that Sheds are "a Class 10 Building" and under Australian Building codes, a Class 10 Building is non-habitable. This means living in a shed would technically be illegal even though you have the approval to build it.
@@VanHomes o
Councils are lazy corruptible and salary piglets so people will find a way to live how they want especially since their money and property . Councils have way too much power over citizens life’s in their own homes .
Council rules are very costly, Van Homes I believe would save heaps of money
In Tasmania there are people living in all sorts. Truck containers, sheds, wooden boxes. You name it
I’m glad I live where we have no bylaws, no building inspectors, no local government. We just have the essentials. Recreation, community Center, roads board and a fire department. Don’t need anything else.
That design has been around for a long time. It is still a great setup and with modern materials are likely great to spend time in. We used to call them box fold camps as we dragged them all over the Canadian far north, often mounted on Nodwell tracked trailers. Same setup complete with the poles to tilt up and hold the roof panels while folding out the rest of the box. Much more utilitarian fit and finish though with basic smallish windows and doors with metal sheathing exterior. The central section held kitchen, washroom, utilities and furnace and we lived very well indeed. Solid and weather proof and pretty bear proof as well, though we had a couple of occasions sitting at supper and feeling the building shake as a bear stood up and shoved on the sidewall. Nice to see it modernized and made fit for urban living.
A bear? 😰
@@VeronicaGorositoMusic Oh yes indeed and a good reminder about how great the buildings were compared to the tents we often used. While the hierarchy of yikes goes up from Black Bears through Grizzlies to Polar Bears depending on where you are it is best to not mess with any of them if you can help it. Solid walls get a thumbs up from me lol.
It would be great as emergency housing after a natural disaster or something. If they were built in bulk it would reduce the cost per unit.
Here in the UK after WW2 we built temporary emergency housing called "Prefabs" intended for 10 years usage, now 76 years later the ones in my town are still housing new generations of happy families. Cheaply built in a hurry does not mean they can't be good and appreciated. I'm a big advocate of practicality and diversity of options, after all people's needs are rarely identical to anyone else's.
Hi Marie
You got a cute name. Lol
I would love this home for myself !Awesome !
I wish they had these in the US!
Me as well. I live in the USA too and i really need one of these too.
@@daliamcmahon5884 well start making them and make shit tonnes of money
LOVE IT!!! his grin at the end of every sentence is priceless!! Sticking it to the Man. with style x
We'd never get away with this in the UK. Planning laws; Legal requirements of electrical installations without approval; mains water systems metered on many houses; We even have rules that deny some home owners to keep a caravan on their property/driveway as it can violate the rules of the Deeds of the property. Then there's objections to plans to dump something that takes away a neighbour''s view or blocks their light - it's a minefield.
Same in Australia ❤️
Coming to New Zealand too.
Really great seeing companies like yours finding quality solutions to housing problems. Well done boys 😊👍
Definitely a great solution to the housing crisis we’re in
Here in the US there are so many restrictions this is almost impossible. This is a very nice rig!
Hi beautiful
You got a cute name. Lol
@@robertmichael3860 Hi Robert! Take care out there. 😎
Thanks
Top idea.
I see a lot of comments about council approval, but given current housing supply issues, I suspect we may see things made easier for people wanting to adopt the tiny home/portable approach.
Unfortunately in NSW, many councils have approval rules that prevent this being a permanent style of living. Might not need approval for a caravan, but usually it can only be used as a prime residence for a temporary period. Stupid laws because there is nothing stopping anyone from living year-round in a mobile home, as long as they move site as required.
I love that there is a door to outside right there in the crapper. You can watch mother nature, air out the stench, and enjoy a cup of coffee all while you evacuate your bowels. That's the life!
Ooh a sense of humor, so refreshing on timid council fearing comments section 😂
Looks fantastic. No need to deal with stupid councils.
What do you do around the base of the of the Van Home to stop cold air, and hide the metal? Do you install some sort of skirting with ummm insulation board to keep the Van Home floors warm in the winter??? Nice VanHome for sure great thinking out of the box on this one!!! God's blessings. Beautiful home.
They used a sealant tape in the vid for draughts
Hi Sandra
You got a cute name. Lol
That’s beautiful.
Built with a great deal of logic. Impressive.
Hi susan
You got a cute name. Lol
Game changer. Well done guys. Brilliant
What an awesome idea wish you were in WA
As a granny who needs a flat, waiting 9 years for public housing is a poor option.A friend has land, now I just need a lotto win to buy this perfect solution. Good one, men.
public housing .. what's that? ..you will be living under a bridge with me..
Wow, that was amazing to watch. There shouldn't be a housing shortage anywhere if this technology is out there!
YOU TALK TOO MUCH
WE NEED MORE VIDEO ABOUT THE CARAVANS
Really wonderful! A dream, really! All the very best to the lucky, blessed recipient!
Brilliant design WELL DONE...now we need to contact you and get them mass produced for many applications...brilliant!
Absolutely love the way the home is made. So quick and easy to set up. New thing's they come up with to make our lives so much easier. Gorgeous home as well!
Hi sonya
You got a cute name. Lol
Awesome product! Definitely keep this in mind
Nothing about price! Why?
This home is beautiful 💜
Wow! That is quite the place.
Perfect for flood affected families! & everyone really. Fab idea.
Very cool
I wish we had these in California
Damn, seems like y'all got a LOT of rules as to what you can do with YOUR property.
It seems to me if you pay taxes on it, and cannot do what you'd like on your land... then it isn't really your land.
@@KathleenEdge yep, if they make you pay to live there, you're a renter, nothing more. Believe me, I own some land and it is a real pisser I gotta pay a bunch of bureaucrats to keep it.
@@sid2112 I bitch at every town meeting I can about having to pay for things I have never used. I even had a lawyer draw up a document saying I wouldn't call the fire dept. if my house was on fire, what do they do but douse it with water, I can do that. Why do I have to pay school taxes for somebody else's kids? I burn, compost or recycle all my trash, what am I paying for? I don't use their water, I have a well. It's like paying protection money to thugs in the old days, legally enforced theft and it's BS.
@Konstantin M ok wait I get hating taxes but calling people dumb, slow or cattle because they pay them is way off base. First off taxes suck everyone hates them but then when a pot hole arises in your neighborhood your probably the first one to call, if a fire breaks out and nobody paid taxes that fire not only burns down your house but the whole damn neighborhood or hell the town. So some people don't use all the services but all people use some of the services guaranteed ,fire garbage, water, (power ok this one can be private in most cases), streets, schools, paved ROADS, infrastructure, law enforcement, governments
@@sid2112 Same here.
you guys should do some serious advertising up here in Northern NSW - so many people are trying to find home alternatives since the flood disaster.
Great idea, only thing is the price of land in the Northern Rivers. And what is either approval as long as there's an existing residence on the property?
Cool music too. Quite the large space for a grannie pad. Very nice design.
Love my VanHome, shook today on the 22nd September 2021 due to an earthquake in Victoria OZ, no worries mate.
Hi Steevin,
We're glad to hear! They're built Aussie tough!
@@VanHomes made in China ?
Sweet tiny home for anyone!
This is a beautiful home well done for the design and final product but can you please tell us a price range perhaps the cheapest.I understand it would vary .
Hi Susan,
Prices start at $49,990 for our fully functioning units.
Check out our price guide here:
www.vanhomes.com.au/pricing-guide/
Thanks!
@@VanHomes that’s amazing I thought it would be much more thank you for your reply
No council approval? You obviously haven't dealt with NSW's Byron Shire Council.
60 days eh
Thanks a lot. Very progressive, considering the current housing shortage
Or Hawkesbury! 😖
Hi there, we have VanHomes in Byron Shire, as well as Hawkesbury and majority of NSW Councils.
Feel free to give us a call and we can explain in more detail.
You do not need approval as long as there is a dwelling as per the Legislation in NSW. You can read all about it here:
www.vanhomes.com.au/your-council-bypass/
WOW! That’s absolutely AWESOME!
That's a rad design, I'll be looking at this for my next build.
Great concept and excellent video! Boxabl is doing the same sort of thing on a smaller scale in the US….don’t know what the zone restrictions are, tho. These types of units are the answer to housing problems in lotsof places, I believe.
Hi Claudia
You got a cute name. Lol
@@robertmichael3860 ✔️
In Victoria you can't live full time in a caravan except in a caravan park. I don't know about other States, but the video is misleading. Do your research, folks!
Victoria is shit cant do anything
Put the van in the back yard, they won’t know. Just deny if they check. Lye to the c👹nts I do.
@Michael Saint you can’t do it in NSW either. Local government act regulation 389, you cannot live in a caravan on land that is not an approved caravan park for more than two consecutive days and no more than 60 days in a year.
That’s if this is registrable as a caravan. If not it’s a transportable building subject to approvals.
@Michael Saint you’d be surprised. Mostly it’s neighbours who will dob you in, I know people who have been caught out because someone applying for development approval used them as an example of comparable development. My local council was using aerial imagery to track unapproved use of shipping containers (which are class 7 buildings requiring approval). It’s at your own risk, but councils know more than you think they do.
@Michael Saint Or even where their heads are - often up their arses.
We need this in California.
We cant build anything on our own land
$100k in permits and plans alone.
Plus the land
Comes out to over $250,000+
And still no home yet
Lovely home to live in and on a good spot. 👍👍
Oh perfect for me in my Son's back yard ☺️🤗🙏
I love it but I can see this loop hole being squashed very quickly as the government will see this as a form of tax avoidance.
I'd still just build a shed and live in that.
at list its much cheaper. And if you have that much money you my as will put it up as down payment for a proper home. You stay my friend .👍👍😉😉
Sadly you need council approval for that!
2.5 m x 2.5 m is the largest you can have with no approval, I’m told. So basically a garden shed.
@@TH-cam_user3333 I bought land, lived in a tent for 6 months trying to get council approval to build a kit home and garage.
Then I lived in a garden shed (f-ing hot in summer) for 6 months while I built the 5 car garage, I now live in it.
And I'm gambling my house money on Bitcoin atm:)
@@r1yamahamini I’ve been homeless before and looked into all manner of accommodation. Unfortunately this government priorities investors over first home owners. Local councils are just as bad. You basically have to blackmail them to put up a fence. I’ve seen this type of stuff first hand. The growth in homelessness is a result of increased rents and bullshit house prices. Hope things turn out well for you.
That looks amazing
Just bloody amazing mate. We are very interested.
Great idea whose time has come!
If I'm converting this right it's over 600sqft. More than adequate for single or couple who get along well 🤗
Bloody good idea!!! Hope you do well. Cheers Ausgranny 🇦🇺🇦🇺👍👍
The council will find a way to get to you no matter what rules you follow.
yep! and if they cannot they will simply Change the rules or make new ones! less than 25million people in the entire Australian lands and we have unaffordable housing prices! its a complete joke
That sounds about right
In launceston the police come around and without trial you get life imprisonment. While youre in prison eating the rotten food they will charge you to pull the thing down and disposal fees at the local tip.
Hi Baz,
We have been using this Legislation to help Australians out since 2008. Councils do not make the legislation, State Government does. They actually changed the law last year - but changed it to include bushfire victims as part of the exemption!
You can read about it here:
bit.ly/3joDxNC
Thanks :)
This is what I will be working towards
That was so cool & hopefully you can bring this to other Countries.