Are you looking for a way to save big money on rent? If you’ve worn out your welcome and can’t use a friends couch or your parents spare bedroom, your next best option is to live out of your car. But how to do it right?
Here is one guy who is saving big money at Duke University by living in his van rather than in a dorm:
I live in a van down by Duke University
Living in a van was my grand social experiment. I wanted to see if I could in an age of rampant consumerism and fiscal irresponsibility afford the unaffordable: an education.
I pledged that I wouldn’t take out loans. Nor would I accept money from anybody, especially my mother, who, appalled by my experiment, offered to rent me an apartment each time I called home. My heat would be a sleeping bag; my air conditioning, an open window. Id shower at the gym, eat the bare minimum and find a job to pay tuition. And for fear of being caught I wouldnt tell anybody.
He’s not the only one trying it, as this thread attests:
If you want to follow this frugal path, what do you need to think about? This video can help:
The video discusses the necessities:
- Sleeping bag or blankets
- Pillow
- Food, in a form that needs no refrigeration and preferably no cooking
- A small camp stove if food needs cooking
- Water
- A 120 volt inverter to power electronics
You also need to strategize about restrooms and showering. If you live on campus this is obviously much easier, since you can use the campus gym and the ubiquitous restrooms. If not, you may want to consider a gym membership.
The techniques of Living on the Appalachian Trail may also be helpful here.
Obviously a van is better than a car, since it provides a lot more space. In particular there is enough room to lie down outstretched and to have a small portable toilet for emergencies.
The next step up from a van would be a small RV. You can sometimes find really good deals on CraigsList. GM has even explored the idea of living full time in your vehicle:
The RV of the Future? GM’s entry, the GMC PAD, is a futuristic-looking, diesel-electric powered urban apartment with mobility, a creature comfort-filled concept for living in the ever-changing cultural landscape of Southern California. It is a modern alternative for those financially locked out of Southern California’s escalating housing market and provides cultural and geographic freedom for the modern city dweller. It offers a new answer to the problem of urban sprawl a flat on wheels.
The next step up: Tiny houses. Which start to look really good compared to a van.f
Other House Ideas
- A different way to build a house #24 – The Future of Houses, The House of the Future
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- A different way to build a house #27 – The Sliding House
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- A different way to build a house #29 – The folding home
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- A different way to build a house #31 – Concrete House
- A different way to build a house #32 – Capsule Apartments
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- A different way to build a house #34 – bridge house
- A different way to build a house #35 – Tiny houses
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- A different way to build a house #37 – Build a house that is really thin
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- A different way to build a house #40 – The capsule
- A different way to build a house #41 – The ultra-secure house
- A different way to build a house #42: Print it
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- A different way to build a house #44 – Display your finest car in the living room
- A different way to build a house #45 – Build yourself an Earthship for an ultra-sustainable green lifestyle
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- A different way to build a house #47 – underground and able to ride out “the apocalypse”
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- A different way to build a house #50 – Build yourself a Ninja house, or add Ninja features to an existing home
- A different way to build a house #51 – An inexpensive home using recycled wood and natural materials
- A different way to build a house #52 – The flat pack house
- A different way to build a house #53 – inexpensive housing for the developing world
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- A different way to build a house #55 – Lustron homes – Amazing steel prefabs from 1950
- A different way to build a house #56 – Buckminster Fuller’s Dymaxion pre-fab house from the 1930s
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- The $300 House competition
- Free Boat Plans
- How to live in your car