Tiny home communities, cottage courts, co-housing, and pocket neighborhoods — the movement toward smaller homes and bigger connection. A field guide to building, financing, and living in a village of your own.
A village is more than a cluster of little houses. It is a deliberate trade: less private square footage in exchange for shared ground, shared tools, and people who notice when your porch light stays off.
Clusters of 10–50 small homes (200–800 sq ft) arranged around shared common spaces. Private homes with community amenities: shared gardens, workshops, laundry, kitchens, gathering spaces. The best of both worlds.
Tiny home communities: homes on wheels or foundations, 200–400 sq ft. Cottage courts: small detached homes around a courtyard, 400–800 sq ft. Co-housing: private units + extensive shared facilities. Pocket neighborhoods: small homes facing a shared commons.
Smaller homes mean lower cost, lower energy, and less maintenance. Shared spaces mean community, safety, and resource efficiency. The average American uses about 15% of their home daily — why pay for the space you don’t?
Retirees downsizing. Young professionals priced out of traditional housing. Remote workers wanting community. People starting over. Minimalists. Environmentalists. Anyone who values experiences over square footage.
These places exist today — proof that the idea survives contact with zoning boards, budgets, and weather.
Four tiny homes built by friends in East Austin. Each house is about 200 sq ft, sharing a backyard, outdoor kitchen, and fire pit. It proved the concept could work in a real city — and went viral doing it.
A 51-acre master-planned community for people leaving homelessness. 500+ micro-homes, RVs, and tiny houses with community gardens, a cinema, a medical clinic, and art studios. A national model for housing solutions.
Ross Chapin’s designs: 8–12 small cottages of 500–1,000 sq ft facing a shared garden, with private front porches and shared back spaces. Beautiful, livable architecture at a human scale.
Emerging everywhere: Escalante Village (Durango, CO), Orlando Lakefront (FL), Tiny Estates (Lancaster, PA), WeeCasa (Lyons, CO). Each has its own model, rules, and price points.
The hard parts are rarely the houses. They’re the rules, the money, the pipes, and the agreements between neighbors.
Most US zoning codes require minimum home sizes (often 1,000+ sq ft) and don’t allow multiple small structures on one lot. Paths through: planned unit developments (PUDs), zoning variances, ADU ordinances, county vs city land.
Traditional mortgages don’t fit tiny homes. Options include personal loans, RV loans (for homes on wheels), construction loans for foundation homes, community land trusts, and cooperative ownership. Some credit unions specialize in alternative housing.
Shared septic or sewer. A community water system. Shared internet (fiber + mesh WiFi). A common building for laundry, kitchen, and workshop. Garden plots. Shared parking to cut car dependency. EV charging.
HOA-style rules, but more cooperative: monthly meetings, shared maintenance, guest and pet policies, quiet hours, and a conflict-resolution process. Keep it simple. Write it down.
Tour the best village walkthroughs on film, or dig into the sources we trust.