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CodyH
12-05-2007, 11:23 AM
My father is considering buying a large piece of land for hunting and fishing and general outdoor activities. We are entertaining the idea of building a house on it together. We want something that doesn?t have any wiring or plumbing hooked up to it, we just want to put a wood burner in it. It does not have to be very large. I am posting in this forum because I was wondering what my options are other then a log cabin. Any information would be great and thanks for your time.

2 cents
12-05-2007, 11:48 AM
I assume you are looking for simple & DIY. Take a look at socketsys, I like this for perhaps building a barn after I build my log home, but you could build a house with this too.

http://www.socketsys.com/

CodyH
12-05-2007, 12:04 PM
That seems like it would work, I am going to send them an email thanks for the response.

rreidnauer
12-06-2007, 10:06 AM
There should be plenty of options available for a simple hunting cabin. Heck, I've seen prebuilt sheds/garages upwards of 20x20. A bit of insulation and paneling, and they're ready to go. GT and Ponyboy came up with some good ideas some time ago, here: http://www.loghomebuilders.org/cottage-homes

ponyboy
12-06-2007, 07:10 PM
Looks like the Eco Cottage link has changed to ecosteel. I don't see the cottage on the web site any more. :-(

If for some reason you didn't want to take the LHBA course and wanted a small log cabin.....
I can't remember who posted this link but I kinda like these. But if you took the course you could build
your own a LOT cheaper.

http://www.montanamobilecabins.com/index.html

akemt
12-14-2007, 11:11 AM
There's also this link I just revisited that has open-panel construction with more inclusions than the normal open-panel kit I've run across: http://cabins.ca Saves you time, some money (atleast for me with my location and costs), and if you're not putting in electric/plumbing, it'd be done quickly.

Were these links on here? They're not all exactly what I'd call cheap. They all have their up/down sides, depending on what you need: http://www.moderncabana.com/MC_main.html
http://www.cabanavillage.com/cabins/
http://www.montanamobilecabins.com/faq.html
http://www.nilsondirect.com/fishhouses/index.html
http://www.fishhousestore.com/frames.html
http://www.panelconcepts.com/homepage.htm
http://www.townandcountryplans.com/

akemt
01-02-2008, 12:03 PM
Ever considered a Yurt or Tipi?

dcbrewmeister
01-11-2008, 06:20 AM
When I was in Alaska, we started to frame up "cabins" that were really storage sheds from Home Depot. They came in a kit, all bundled up nice and ran ~$900 each. A few modifications (tin roof, a couple of windows and insulation) and they were really starting to take shape. We put up 3 a day with 2 guys working on it, the finishing took longer. The best part? The whole kit fit in the back of a pickup with an 8' bed... Once they arrived on the barge that is.

Another trick for a cheap building is to stay dimensional - 4x8, 8x12, 8x10. If you do it right, you'll have very little waste or cutting and it will go up very fast.

akemt
01-21-2008, 04:04 PM
www.countryplans.com is a good resource for building small and off-grid.

ftully
01-31-2008, 07:36 AM
Earthbag building : the tools, tricks and techniques by Hunter, Kaki (ISBN 0865715076)
It may be available in your public library.
If not, click link.
http://ipac.slco.lib.ut.us/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=12W17Q639D541.117193&profile=dial&uri=link=3100007~!629839~!3100001~!3100002&aspect=subtab13&menu=search&ri=2&source=~!horizon&term=Earthbag+building+%3A+the+tools%2C+tricks+and +techniques+%2F&index=PALLTI#focus

ponyboy
01-31-2008, 02:33 PM
Found this the other day. Don't know if they're any good or not.

http://www.cabanavillage.com/cabin-kits/

Oops! akemt already posted this one. Doh!

workman43113
02-17-2008, 09:31 AM
ever consider building an A-FRAME? It would be pretty cheap and easy to build?

ponyboy
03-01-2008, 06:22 PM
Not any insulation to speak of, but kinda cool.

http://materialicio.us/2008/03/01/abod/