Saturday, 20 December 2025

PAIRS 25 – TINY THINGS: A HOUSE & A CAMPER


https://newatlas.com/tiny-houses/vagabond-haven-off-grid-tiny-house/#gallery:1

https://newatlas.com/camping-trailers/escape-ultralight-13-foot-camper/




Dreaming of things tiny seems to be a fashionable trait these days. Might it be the growing cost of building and renting that is stimulating this interest? Maybe it is the interest itself, the mortgage, that drives the desire. Aligned with this aspiration for things miniature and compact is the concept of places remote, isolated wilderness; private place; green, off-grid and cheap; in brief, ideas of 'breaking free.' The PR always illustrates these little places as singular entities located in raw nature, in true Whitman/Thoreau/Muir country, with wonderful vistas illustrating the grand vision as a real possibility for everyone/anyone in spite of all realities, suggesting an escape from the rat race; economically too. Even the branding reinforces this concept.




So we see tiny homes being promoted along with tiny trailers: see – https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2022/08/tiny-house-fashion-or-fad.html;

https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2022/05/thoughts-on-tiny-houses.html;

and

https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2023/09/the-tiny-house-deceit.html. Sometimes the homes are designed as trailers, ready to be placed anywhere, alone, ‘free,’ irrespective of what services may or may not be available, and without any intention of moving on. Decks, lean-tos and other built-in/built-on accessories and plants tell the tale of permanence in spite of the wheels. Whatever the reality might be, the vision always includes every luxury and comfort possible, even in excess, suggesting that there is everything here and more, in spite of things being smaller than small. The strategy to sometimes provide a home on wheels is merely to overcome all planning restrictions rather than to offer easy mobility, a trick originally promoted by Kevin McCloud of Grand Designs. In other circumstances, the intent to keep on the move is genuine, and tiny trailers are designed as true mobile accommodation, a real companion to a vehicle rather than a clever ruse.


Kevin McCloud's cabin in the woods.
The cabin is built on a trailer frame on wheels that have been dug into a hole for concealment.




This illusory Arcadian vision of a return to the peace and tranquillity of nature, to a freedom from everything including planning regulations, neighbours, and debt, is a fantasy that glosses over every fact of actual settlement and dwelling; but the hope remains alive and well in spite of this reality and its necessities. It is the same armchair dreaming that the potential tourist enjoys when browsing the brochures, with the same outcomes too.



The vision is cleverly heightened and hyped by the presentation. The branding is sometimes blatant, as with the Escape trailer. Likewise the photography is used to create and support the dream. Clever framing of the images suggests possibilities that just do not exist, even though they might be imaged in the imagination stimulated by the photograph. Details allow the thoughts to linger away from every other excluded distraction, just as the cleverly framed view of the interior trickily trims the space off precisely at an extremity that one reads as an extension of open space rather than a limiting solid wall or a restrictive piece of built-in furniture.





The wide-angled lens is able to distort the image of place and its depth to create spacious vistas out of the most confined areas that enjoy an expansion into a marvellous infinity patterned with trees, rivers, lakes, meadows, and hills, leaving one alone and private, ‘Aliced,’ in a verdant wonderland free from all limitations, without a thought given to access, power, water, sewerage, drainage, electricity, or ownership of anything but my perfect tiny place standing there to be envied. What cannot be seen is assumed to be only more of the same perfect ideal that is being illustrated and promoted as an utter wonderment that is available now, and affordable.





The adage that, if something seems too good to be true, it probably is, needs to be heeded, extra tiny or not. If this is too difficult a challenge, imagine living in the one, miniature enclosure, day after day, hemmed in with the most luxurious of efficient, fold-away compactness, perhaps on a wet day, with nowhere to go but one step to the front, the left or to the right.




Alternatively, see this accommodation as a low security jail cell rather than a potential, perpetual delight.



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