Zaha Hadid and Tiny Houses in The New Yorker

1 MIN READ

I love reading about architecture in the mainstream press, and the July 25 issue of The New Yorker has a couple of stories on our favorite subject. Paul Goldberger writes about Zaha Hadid and two of her buildings recently completed in the United Kingdom: the Evelyn Grace Academy in south London and the Riverside Museum in Glasgow (he digs them both). I was more interested, though, in Alec Wilkinson’s piece on what he terms “the tiny house movement.”

Wilkinson is clearly no convert to the tiny-house way–in his telling, designer/builder/advocate Jay Shafer comes off as a bit of a freak–but even this skeptical overview stirs longing in me for the simplicity of a dwelling you can build without a mortgage and park wherever suits you. And say what you like about Shafer, a self-taught designer and builder, in the past year he’s sold 1,000 sets of house plans and 10,000 copies of his book, “The Small House Book.”

About the Author

Bruce D. Snider

Bruce Snider is a former senior contributing editor of  Residential Architect, a frequent contributor to Remodeling. 

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