Monday, January 18, 2010

What Would Thoreau Build?

Keen readers may be noticing a running theme throughout the last few posts. Smaller houses, less consumption of resources, heck, even enjoying your home as its value plummets.

Is your humble DotLoop blogger taking crazy pills? After all, we're in America, the land of the 15 pound burger, of the Big Gulp, of McMansions. And of course, the all-American transportation device: the SUV. Bigger is better. Bloated is beautiful. From sea to shining sea.

And even though everyone is hitching a ride on the Green Revolution bandwagon, if we want to go green, well, there's an app for that. It's okay to have a four-car garage as long as that garage is filled with hybrid Explorers, right?

Indeed, in America, it seems the answer to our environmental issues is the same answer to most problems: buy something.

Thoroughly Thoreau

But what if we took a different approach? What if we boiled it all down to what we really needed, not what the latest ads on TV compel us to think we need? What if we valued our time more than our stuff? How would that change us?

What if we took a nod from that crazy nut from 19th Century Massachusetts, Henry David Thoreau? Thoreau famously abdicated himself from society for two years, two months, and two days and spent his time on Walden Pond. He simplified his life to the bare bones, and only had to work six weeks a year to sustain his food and energy resources. The rest of the time he spent on any activity he wished.

The $826 Home

In comparison with the average 2500 sq foot home of today, Thoreau built himself a cabin that was a mere 10' by 15'. Below is a list of materials Thoreau used, from Walden:

  • Board's: $8.03 1/2, mostly shanty boards
  • Refuse shingles for roof and sides: $4.00
  • Laths: $1.25
  • Two second-hand windows with glass: $2.43
  • One thousand old brick: $4.00
  • Two casts of lime: $2.40. That was high.
  • Hair: $0.31. More than I needed
  • Mantle-tree iron: $0.15
  • Nails: $3.90
  • Hinges and screws: $0.14
  • Latch: $0.10
  • Chalk: $0.01
  • Transportation: $1.40. I carried a good part on my back.
  • In all: $28.12 1/2

    In 2008 dollars, that would equal $826.26. When's the last time you built a house (on a wooded lot, to boot!) for under $1000.00?

    The Cost of a Thing
    Think about all of the stuff you bought within the last decade that you only used a few times. Think about all the wasted items that did nothing more than collect dust, or take up more space. Maybe you even expanded your home's size just so you could store the latest trinkets from Bed, Bath and Beyond. Maybe you even bought an extra storage space within the last decade. Ironic, of course, considering the rise of the storage industry's expansion from 289 million square feet in 1984 to nearly 2.2 billion square feet by the end of 2007 coincided with the rise of McMansions.

    Maybe in light of this burst housing bubble, we should reevaluate what makes a home a home, and see value in the intangibles. Maybe bigger is better, as in, a bigger life, and not necessarily a bigger house.

    Maybe we should do a cost analysis the way Thoreau did: "The cost of a thing is the amount of what I call life which is required to be exchanged for it, immediately or in the long run."

    Maybe it all comes down to three simple words, spoken by the world's most famous tax dodger and transcendentalist: "Simplify! Simplify! Simplify!"

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