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The Newest Cottage Industry
Article from the Wall Street Journal about the appeal of Cottage Housing and the rise of the Cottage Housing Industry
This
is from the Wall Street Journal. It does not necessarily represent the views of The Cascade
Agenda or the Cascade Land Conservancy. At times, we present views we think will
be of interest to supporters of The Agenda.
By Sara Lin
Peter Moon's family of six snuggles into bench seats for dinners
together. Their house is 1,100 square feet, a bit smaller than two
squash courts. "We really don't need more space," says Mr. Moon, a
46-year-old software designer. "I don't mind being cozy."
Mr. Moon says he and his wife dumped a much larger
home in Boston three years ago to seek a simpler, greener life here.
Mr. Moon recently persuaded his parents to sell their 2,000-square-foot
house on New York's Long Island and retire to a small neighboring
cottage. "We've lived in bigger, older houses, but this is by far the
most livable," says Mr. Moon. "There's no place to accumulate junk."
The designers of the Moon family house, Ross Chapin and Jim Soules, think small in a way that is practically un-American. They build tract houses that are half the size of the average U.S. home and cost a lot more per square foot. What is surprising is how quickly they sell them. The men are building their fortunes with buyers willing to pay more for less. Customers, such as the Moons, say they prefer taking up less room and using less energy.

