Jay Austin's Beautiful, Illegal Tiny House - YouTube

Channel: ReasonTV

[18]
Demand for housing in Washington DC is going through the roof.
[23]
Over a thousand people move into the city every month, driving up the cost of housing
[27]
and they're turning the nation's capital into a construction zone.
[33]
Tower cranes piercing the sky above the city streets have become so common
[37]
they're just part of the background.
[41]
But as fast as the cranes have gone up,
[43]
demand for housing is rising even faster.
[46]
Making DC among the most expensive places to live in the United States.
[51]
And one innovation whose time has come
[53]
shows just why the demand for housing is far from being met.
[64]
I kinda got driven down the tiny house road because of affordability,
[68]
simplicity, sustainability and then mobility.
[70]
Tiny houses are very cheap to build, you can build one of these for ten thousand dollars
[74]
you can build one for thirty, forty, fifty thousand dollars,
[77]
but they definitely come in far beneath the cost of a regular home
[81]
especially in a city like DC.
[84]
They're very sustainable, they take very little energy to heat or cool.
[88]
So having a space that I could hook up to solar
[91]
that I could, you know, catch rain water and use for a simple shower and sink
[95]
was very very appealing to me.
[97]
They are mobile because many of them are built on wheels
[101]
but the reason they're often built on wheels is because it then escapes
[103]
a lot of the kind of coding requirements which these homes would violate
[110]
not because they're unsafe places to live,
[112]
but because the minimum size of a room you know must be 120 square feet
[117]
and if these homes are 120 square feet altogether you then have obvious issues.
[124]
This is not a tiny house, it's the Office of Zoning, the Zoning Comission,
[128]
the Zoning Administrator, the Board of Zoning Adjustment and the Office of Planning
[132]
which, along with the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs
[135]
implements, adjudicates and enforces 34 chapters and 600 pages of regulations
[141]
governing property use and building requirements int he nation's capital.
[146]
The director of the city's Office of Planning, Ellen McCarthy,
[149]
described the problem with allowing tiny houses in the city:
[163]
and so the zoning authorities have allowed a few experiments in affordable housing
[167]
like this apartment made entirely from shipping containers.
[172]
But the city is constrained by a zoning ordinance that was drawn up in 1958
[177]
that's 56 years of cultural change and building innovations, like tiny houses,
[182]
that the code wasn't designed to address.
[185]
and for small builders like Jay Austin, getting a special exemption from the zoning authorities
[190]
could cost tens of thousands of dollars and years of time
[194]
with no guarantee of success.
[196]
The proposed changes to zoning rewrite won't effect what we're doing at all,
[199]
we are, tiny homes on wheels are still a little bit further out
[203]
probably many years out, of decades out.
[205]
It's totally legal to buy one of these and to park it somewhere.
[209]
And really it only becomes illegal once you step inside and say 'this is my home.'
[217]
We could leave these houses on the lot I imagine for 20 years
[221]
and there wouldn't be any issue with it
[222]
but if we declared these are full time residences then there, you know,
[225]
would be a little bit more, little bit more trouble perhaps.
[230]
The laws that keep Jay Austin from living in his own home
[233]
have their genesis in New York City's zoning resolution of 1916.
[238]
For the first time in history, committees of urban planners
[240]
began to reshape an entire American city.
[244]
They split up skyscrapers to provide more sunlight on the streets below.
[249]
Industrial factories were separated from residential property.
[255]
Immigrant communities were kept apart from neighborhoods of the elite.
[259]
And when the supreme court ruled these laws didn't violate property rights,
[263]
zoning quickly spread to every major city in America.
[267]
Every city, that is, except for one.
[300]
Houston for me is an experiment.
[303]
It's an experiment in overt capitalism.
[308]
And therefore very much at home in Texas,
[311]
there is a kind of libertarian way of thinking here.
[315]
It's much more alive in a way, much more organic, than a typical zoned city
[321]
that is more restricted by these old fashioned measures that no longer are viable.
[326]
If you live in an unzoned city, you have to develop a dialogue or negotiation.
[331]
And that of course we have seen in our country is not easy to come by.
[336]
I have architect friends that have to operate in places like Berkeley
[340]
where the zoning board is sort of a group of aestheticians without training
[348]
say 'that's no good, this is good, this is Berkeley, this is not.'
[352]
And this sort of, you know, it's silliness but has enormous economic consequences
[359]
is operating in those places.
[362]
While here, you can almost get away with anything.
[368]
Anything, like a house clad entirely in beer cans.
[373]
In Houston a few simple laws govern lot sizes and set backs from the street.
[377]
There's even a new historical preservation ordinance.
[381]
But for the most part, developments are regulated by private covenants
[384]
and deed restrictions.
[386]
And without city codes, committees or planners to regulate land use,
[390]
all sorts of creative expression are possible.
[395]
When architects began to build homes out of corrugated metal,
[398]
a cheap material associated with poverty and trailer parks,
[401]
no one had the authority to stop them.
[405]
As it turned out not only were tin houses economical,
[408]
they also kept homes cool by reflecting sunlight during Houston's sweltering summers.
[414]
Today tin houses are cherished as a unique Houston innovation.
[419]
Whether it's a tin house in Houston or a McMansion in McAllen,
[422]
homes in the sprawling state of Texas
[424]
will always be cheaper than the densely populated northeast.
[428]
But compared to the rest of the sun belt where cities are zoned and the land is plentiful,
[432]
unregulated Houston is still the most affordable large city in America.
[438]
I totally agree that regulation is about preventing bad things from happening.
[442]
Houston's success in creating affordable housing for the middle class
[445]
is one reason why the city is disparaged by the one group whose job it makes obsolete.
[451]
Urban planners like Harriet Tregoning, formerly of the Washington DC Office of Planning.
[456]
I hate to make Houston the whipping boy, right?
[458]
Oh go ahead.
[460]
You know, that's a place that doesn't have zoning, it doesn't' have regulation
[463]
and it's not exactly the full flower of urbanism.
[474]
Two hours down the gulf coast from Houston is Victoria.
[477]
A city that hasn't had zoning since it was founded 190 years ago.
[482]
And the most unusual thing about Victoria is that it's not very unusual at all.
[489]
I don't notice anything greatly different about Victoria
[493]
and the look that Victoria portrays
[496]
and the look that they have in San Antonio, Austin or Houston.
[499]
So, property rights in Texas are sacred, you can do what you want to do with your property
[506]
and I think most of the people here in Victoria want to protect that right.
[512]
The city's growth and land use is based more on economics and the will of the owner
[518]
rather than some quasi-governmental body that you have to ask permission from.
[523]
East of town was a rendering plant where they took dead animals and processed them.
[528]
The people that were in favor of zoning would say
[531]
'well what if there's a rendering plant next to your house?'
[534]
Economics dictate that you're not going to put a rendering plant
[539]
next to a residential subdivision
[542]
economics dictates that you're gonna build a shopping center on a major thoroughfare.
[547]
It's worked very well in Victoria for a number of years and I trust we'll continue to do so.
[554]
Now it's true if you look hard enough in Victoria or Houston
[557]
you can find the odd high rise poking out of a low density neighborhood
[561]
and sometimes economics dictates that you'll have to eat your butterscotch dilly bar
[565]
next to the bail bondsman.
[567]
But tolerating a little disharmony, a dash of kitsch
[570]
and the occasional strip club in a strip mall along the Texas gulf coast
[574]
is a small down payment on the right to be the architect of your own life.
[588]
Because if you're Jay Austin, you can build the home of your dreams,
[592]
you just can't live there.
[594]
For now his tiny house is a part time residence and a full time showpiece
[598]
to present to the public in the hopes of changing a zoning committe
[601]
that hasn't updated a zoning code in 56 years.