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Could A Tiny Mobile Studio Solve Your Housing Crisis?

A startup in Austin, Texas, has built the prototype of a tiny home that could stack up, in a "rack," and move when you do.
Kasita
A startup in Austin, Texas, has built the prototype of a tiny home that could stack up, in a "rack," and move when you do.

If you travel for work — and you're tired of living out of a suitcase, renting rooms and sharing bathrooms with grungy roommates — there's a man in Austin, Texas, who has a possible solution. Call it a long shot. But basically, he's building tiny self-contained apartments that move when you do.

Jeff Wilson gives me a tour of the first prototype. He's the mastermind behind the Kasita ("little home" in Spanish — only with a "k" instead of a "c").

It's a steel box, about 10 by 20 feet. It's different from typical mobile homes in two ways: It's made for downtown, not the outskirts of a city. And it's swank: dishwasher, washer/dryer and a subwoofer in the floor — because we can't live without a good sound system. "It's essential," Wilson says. "Absolutely."

The Kasita unit comes with a washer and dryer, dishwasher and subwoofer. The floors have bendable tiles, which don't crack during a move.
/ Kasita
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Kasita
The Kasita unit comes with a washer and dryer, dishwasher and subwoofer. The floors have bendable tiles, which don't crack during a move.

The Kasita does not have a walk-in closet. Wilson's team has used various tricks to make the place feel bigger: white walls, reflective surfaces, high ceilings (so you get vertically what you don't get horizontally). The front wall — the part that would face the street — is a dazzling glass balcony — fully enclosed, like a display case for a luxury watch, only human sized.

"This is really the personal expression space," Wilson says. "So we're leaving that completely clean. No desk, no furniture. You can put plants up there or stand out there and do your yoga, read a book."

Wilson has a vision: that this little Kasita will be just one unit in a vast global network. From New York to San Francisco to Dubai to Beijing, large cities will have something called a "rack" — a building edifice, where you can pop in, say, six or nine units. There would be hookup valves for water, electricity and sewage. Just plug in your home like you lock your bike. And when a Kasita renter needs to move, just press a button on your smartphone and have your home meet you ... wherever.

He's already leased the land for a rack in Austin. Some units there would go for below-market rates of $600 per month, excluding utilities.

"One of the things we're trying to solve for is having your own place, and not getting on Craigslist and finding a bunch of roommates that have too many cats and too much bong water left out on the dining room table," Wilson says.

This idea — that today's wandering class needs wandering homes, too — it resonates, though I ask him about a potential downside. If this takes off, couldn't people be even more disconnected from each other — and from communities — than they are today?

Dismissively, Wilson sums up the concern "that this is going to create some sort of dystopian wandering millennials out there — you know crazy on Tinder, roaming around the planet in their Kasitas."

He doesn't buy it.

Neither does San Francisco-based architect Mark Hogan — though for different reasons. Hogan writes about tiny homes. He finds it surprising that anyone has built a prototype for a tiny apartment that moves because, he says, it's so unlikely to work.

"If you're living in 200 square feet, you can just hire somebody to pack up your stuff and move it fairly easily," he says. "I'm not sure who ... both wants to live in a small space and be locked into this kind of movable apartment idea."

The idea of a tiny home, often factory made, is not new. In the Netherlands, a company turns shipping containers into housing that's about 8 feet wide and up to 39 feet long. In Portland, Ore., you can rent a tiny hotel room to try out the lifestyle.

The Kasita gives the decades-old movement for plug-and-play apartments a new, mobile twist.

But, Hogan says, there's a big question mark around how many cities would even want Kasita buildings and whether it could scale up — the cost of moving, just once, is easily thousands of dollars. There's shipping, the crane you need to lift the Kasita into a rack, the permit to close the street while you move the home. "That's definitely going to be more expensive, unless there's some kind of magic that I've never heard of in construction that's going to allow that."

That said, Hogan has moved about a dozen times in 15 years. So yes, he admits, the idea is compelling.

This story aired as part of an All Tech Considered segment on the Internet of Things, click here for the second part of the segment about web-connected home appliances.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Aarti Shahani is a correspondent for NPR. Based in Silicon Valley, she covers the biggest companies on earth. She is also an author. Her first book, Here We Are: American Dreams, American Nightmares (out Oct. 1, 2019), is about the extreme ups and downs her family encountered as immigrants in the U.S. Before journalism, Shahani was a community organizer in her native New York City, helping prisoners and families facing deportation. Even if it looks like she keeps changing careers, she's always doing the same thing: telling stories that matter.
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