Creada como iniciativa social por/para Ciudadanos del Mundo al promover la idea de que no somos seres pasivos sino millones que nos nutrimos e influimos día a día en el acaecer de nuestra historia socio-política, artística y personal. Enorgullécete de no pertenecer a un país, sino al Mundo Entero/LA COMUNIDAD, para regalar ideas, escribir historia, proponer acciones nuevas y videos. Este es NUESTRO sitio. El tuyo♥el mío♥ el DE TO♥D♥S para alimentarnos♥ unirnos♥ reunirnos♥amarnos♥apoyarnos♥
El vídeo está dividido en 3 partes, una nos da las
instrucciones y los materiales escritos en forma de instructivo, la segunda
parte es una serie de imágenes gráficas paso a paso de cómo hacer el calentador
de agua, y la tercera parte es un vídeo donde muestra más detalles de este
calentador de agua, funciones y el modelo ya terminado en una entrevista, con
materiales reciclados y muy baratos.
Two years ago, Debra and her family lived
in a nearly 2000 square foot home on an acre and a half of land. Then her
husband lost his job and they began to work 4 jobs between them to pay the
mortgage, until one day they remembered they had a choice.
Before having their son, Debra and her husband Gary had spent 9 years living in
very tiny homes in South America. Living small hadn't felt like a sacrifice,
but a way to stay focused on what is important. They decided they wanted to get
back to that.
They stopped working so hard, sold or gave away all of their extra stuff and
began looking for the perfect tiny home.
Debra had always liked the Mississippi shotgun style homes, and one day, while
browsing craigslist, they noticed an ad for a local Arkansas company custom
building tiny homes for a price that could mean an end to house payments.
Six weeks and $15,000 later they had their own fully paid-off dwelling. Today,
Debra, her husband and 13-year-old son live in a 320-square foot home that is
not a sacrifice, but exactly what they need.
Lula and Talbott http://www.youtube.com/4dlifestyles built a home with their own hands for about $4,000. They
have electricity, hot water and internet with the most incredible views you'll
ever see! check it out!
In a town where the median home price is over half a
million dollars, Jenine Alexander decided to build her own. Using resources
like the tiny house blogs and the 1950 bestselling DIY book "Your Dream
Home: How to Build It for Less Than $3,500" (a gift from a friend), Jenine
spent less than $3,500 on her home. In fact, she used nearly only materials
recovered from the dump or found on craigslist and the only things she paid for
were a used trailer and fasteners (nails, screws, hinges, etc).
She built it on wheels not just to get around minimum size standards, but
mostly because she couldn't afford land in her hometown of Healdsburg,
California.
This 47 M2 Habiterra home was built in Mexico in 14 hourswithout any equipment, skilled labor or pre-fabricated parts. The gray cost
including electrical and plumbing installations included. Cost may vary per
location region, however an Habiterra block should cost less than a standard
8" block. 2,568 blocks were need at a cost of $0.50 per block.
How to have a home with no house payments and no monthly
utility bills!
This is an introduction to simple solar homesteading that provides information
on how to find cheap land, build an inexpensive home, and use solar power to
eliminate monthly utility bills.
What would you do if you had no house payment and no monthly utility bills ?
Well watch the video and I will show you how it is done easily and with very
little money
Steel Cased rubber tire booted through steel casing with
lags. Much more affordable than concrete and wood block. Very stable. We cut
through the rim bead with bolt cutters and sawed through the tread at a 45
degree angle. If you don't add the 45 you need a new blade every tire. With the
angle you can get about 7 tires cit.
An introduction of The Bottle House. It is more as a
Chiesa. Some of the bottles are filled with various "non freezable"
concoctions to add refractions of color to other bottles.
calearth.org this film shows how a pile of
earth, dug out from the building site, is turned into a small house called Eco-
Dome (moon cocoon model), using the Superadobe technology. It documents how
professionals and students from many countries training at Cal-Earth Institute
built this structure. It is intended for use with materials and tools developed
for instruction during the apprenticeship retreat at Cal-Earth. Superadobe
technology was first presented by the architect to NASA for lunar habitats, and
can build single or clustered homes on earth which are resistant to fire,
floods, wind storms and earthquakes.
Tokio, la mega ciudad más
poblada del mundo, tiene de todo, excepto espacio. En la actualidad, 35
millones de personas conviven en una urbe que cuenta con una densidad de
población que triplica la de Londres.
¿Cómo pueden vivir tantos habitantes en un área tan limitada? En este curioso
documental Odisea les presentará a arquitectos que revelarán sus innovadores
secretos para una ciudad en la que las casas miden una media de 60 m2. Podrán
ver cómo se ahorra espacio con estructuras de almacenamiento inteligente
ocultas o una distribución extraordinariamente eficiente y algunos trucos para
que los apartamentos parezcan más espaciosos con juegos de luces. Uno de cada
cinco habitantes en apartamentos de Tokio no tiene espacio para un cuarto de
baño privado, así que han de utilizar uno de los 1.100 baños públicos de la
ciudad. La falta de espacio también provoca que los pisos sean a menudo
compartidos incluso por tres generaciones, lo que limita la intimidad sexual de
las parejas. Podrán conocer la red de "hoteles de amor": habitaciones
que pueden alquilarse por horas en hoteles ultra privados o incluso habitaciones
de hotel en forma de cápsula del tamaño de una cabina telefónica
específicamente diseñadas para el descanso de ejecutivos. Aquellos que no
tienen espacio para mascotas en casa puede suplir esta necesidad en los
específicos zoológicos de mascotas de la ciudad. Y si no tienen espacio para un
armario en casa, seguro que en una de las tres millones de máquinas que venden
de todo a cambio de unas monedas encuentran lo que buscan, no hace falta
almacenarlo.
Los estadounidenses aman
el espacio: sus viviendas tienen de media 230 metros cuadrados. Pero la crisis
inmobiliaria podría estar cambiando mentalidades. En Portland, Oregon, han
empezado a extenderse las casas pequeñas, a veces extremadamente pequeñas. Un informe de AFPTV.