I hate the thought of fourplexes plopped helter-skelter on any old block of the city. What I might not hate is tiny houses. Help me think it through.
The reason I love my 40-foot city lot is that it gives me my own piece of ground: a little green (or white), a garden, play space for the grandkids, a place to put down a lawn chair and share a beer with the neighbors, a place to store my car (until the kids take away my keys) and bikes, and something to decorate for the holidays. My four walls also give me as much privacy as I want.
Why not explore dividing some 40-by-120-foot lots into smaller pieces with smaller homes? It might work. A tiny house does not need a big lot. With thoughtful architectural planning and smart zoning, you could fit four houses on a lot. You could even line garage or storage units along the alley. Most people will need cars for years to come or at least a place to put bikes and lawn chairs. Put a basement under the tiny house (it could be larger than the house itself), and the tiny house is not that tiny anymore.
Who would buy them? Me, for one. Our "big" house is almost the smallest one on the block. Still, except for all the accumulated memories, it's roomy. Besides, the garden will get too big as my back gets more bent. A tiny house on a bit of land with neighbors looks like a good downsizing alternative to an apartment or high-rise. Singles, single parents and couples might see them as starter homes. Affordable homes on 40-foot lots are getting more scarce.
Most important, make these tiny homes real homes with a bit of land, a mortgage and the opportunity to build equity.
Your thoughts?
John Widen, Minneapolis
ABORTION
The role of men in this debate (and the role of the court)
I have seen a lot of men commenting on what women can and cannot do with their bodies, especially with their reproductive organs. This may be controversial to say, but as someone who has had a uterus for 26 years more than every cisgendered male out there, I think I know a little bit more about what people with uteri are able to do — and we are every bit able to make our own decisions about our own bodies, including situations involving abortion. If a dead person has every legal right to not donate their organs to save a living, breathing adult human, then I should have the same legal right to not donate my entire body to fetal tissue.
Mari Gades, St. Paul
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