they don't......but it would be cheaper for tax payers to give them a mobile home.....
I have no idea what one of them cost, especially if you make a massive purchase..
They had a little thing here recently & there were huge lines all day.. Lots of interest in those tiny homes... I have heard from around $20,000 to over twice that for one of them.. What does a mobile home go for??
Teams of college students from all over the state converged on Cosumnes River College this week to complete tiny houses and compete in an innovation contest.
The Sacramento Municipal Utility District launched the inaugural competition for colleges to design net-zero-energy-use tiny homes. The competition is meant to spur development of new ideas and techniques in energy-efficient development — and to train construction workers. A stipend of $3,000 to $8,000 was provided to each team.
In this contest, the homes are limited to 400 square feet inside, but teams can get creative with rooftop patio space if they want.
The teams are vying for a top prize of $10,000, and they can also win awards of $4,000 each for architecture, energy, livability and technology.
School teams participating have been working for two years on their houses, starting design and research into efficiency and technology. Construction only began on many of the homes this spring and summer.
The homes will be on display and open for tours from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct. 15 at Parking Lot E on the Cosumnes campus, 8401 Center Parkway.
The contestants can also win $1,000 in a people’s choice award, determined by visitors. All prize money was donated by sponsors of the contest.
Teams competing include students from California State University campuses in Chico, Fresno and Sacramento; Cosumnes River College; College of the Sequoias in Visalia; Laney College in Oakland; San Jose City College; Santa Clara University; the University of California Berkeley; and a combined team from the University of California Santa Cruz with Cabrillo College in Aptos.
The two-year competition saw some other teams drop out.
The finished houses,
which cost about $40,000 each to build, may be auctioned off to raise money for other projects, used as campus offices or displayed. Each school participating gets to decide what to do with their own team’s structure. Sac State, for example, will use it for an on-campus learning lab. Chico State is donating its home to Habitat for Humanity.
Mark Anderson covers technology, agriculture, banking and finance, venture capital, energy, mining and hospitality for the Sacramento Business Journal.