$120k for a tiny home is an absolute ripoff, and no one should be paying even half of that.
I love the idea of tiny homes, and I want one on my property one day probably for my kid/s to live in when they’re a bit older and want some independence, but there are a few problems.
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Councils. Bloody councils. Regulations are through the roof and confusing as all hell. Application fees are stupidly expensive - in my area they increased the fees by like $5k since covid while pushing the idea of people building them! Last I checked the application fee and everything that goes with it was $28k here, and if you get denied you don’t get any of that back. Greedy pieces of shit they are. Depending on different things to do with the dwelling might mean it needs to be built as a “secondary dwelling” or a stand-alone new home, and as such the regulations and costs vary wildly. Having them on wheels/a trailer is a workaround, but even then you can only legally live in one in the same space for 6 months I believe it was, before having to move to a different place.
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Land to put it on. You can’t just build a tiny home on a trailer and just pull up somewhere and live there. Your home build is actually only a minority cost in buying a home and land package - you can build a regular full house for like $150k, but you need the land to put it on. Even a 400msq2 block these days can be $500k easily or more depending on location.
ShrimpCurler@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 day ago
I wish these kinds of services could target specific at risk groups, not a gender.
I would be happy if it was focused on homeless parents with young children, or homeless victims of family violence. With those things they might still end up getting only women, but at least they’d be selected based on their situation instead of bigotry.
jaek@aussie.zone 6 hours ago
I really wish that these services were for people to build huge houses instead of tiny houses, and that the houses had big chicken legs and could run around like baba yaga
Ilandar@lemmy.today 1 day ago
It’s not bigotry. They limited the scope to focus on the group they most wanted to help:
It was organised by two ordinary people who used their family inheritance to fund it. It should be obvious to anyone with a brain that such a small scale operation isn’t going be able to help everyone in Australia. If you’re so offended, maybe you can start something yourself instead of moaning about “muh men’s rights” on social media.
ShrimpCurler@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 day ago
Maybe bigotry is the wrong word in this case, but maybe not. Either way it’s still discriminating based on an unchangeable characteristic of those people. I’d be equally annoyed if they targeted men or a specific race or an eye colour. I just think that when you try to help people, you should try to discriminate on circumstance, not things like race or gender. And we should be calling it out so people can do better in the future.
I do know there is a lot of correlation between gender and circumstance, but I think it’s either lazy to use gender as a proxy or they really are bigoted.
On the other hand I would still like to give them props for helping people in a significant way.