SHARES

Five years ago, the Brinks family made a $57,000 purchase of a 21-acre property in Kentucky and turned it into a sustainable tiny house village where their children each have their very own private tiny home. 
 
A Private Tiny House Village Where Teens Have A House Each 4 family members share 6 tiny houses in total—the parents’ house, two separate houses for teens Lennox and Brodey, a double bathroom house, a pool house, and a guest house.. 
Keli hopes this unique living situation will teach her children what it means to live sustainably and she said: the tiny houses conserve energy because it's easier to heat and cool smaller spaces. Additionally, the family produces only one bag of trash per week and the reason we try to live by the very important rule of RRRR: refuse, reduce, reuse, recycle. We almost always refuse plastic bags for groceries and use cloth bags.
 
For the time being, Lennox cannot imagine living anywhere else. "This isn't a temporary thing," she said. "This is a solid home for us."