Tiny Houses

Solar-powered micro house doesn't skimp on home comforts

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The Cosmic One version shown is the Studio model and measures just 380 sq ft (35.3 sq m)
Cosmic Buildings
The Cosmic One version shown is the Studio model and measures just 380 sq ft (35.3 sq m)
Cosmic Buildings
The Cosmic One is topped by an unusual roofline that incorporates solar panels
Cosmic Buildings
The Cosmic One includes a small deck area and is accessed by some steps
Cosmic Buildings
The Cosmic One's bathroom looks high end and includes a shower, limestone sink, and toilet
Cosmic Buildings
The Cosmic One's kitchen is well-stocked and includes a dishwasher, fridge, oven, induction stove, and sink
Cosmic Buildings
The Cosmic One is finished in either aluminum panels or charred wood, with a stainless steel roof
Cosmic Buildings
The Cosmic One comes in larger versions, including this two bedroom model
Cosmic Buildings
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The Cosmic One is a prefabricated micro house that comes in multiple configurations and can serve as an accessory dwelling unit (ADU), a tiny house, or even a full-time family home. It can optionally run off-the-grid and features a compact interior that doesn't skimp on home comforts.

The Cosmic One unit shown is the smallest model and measures 380 sq ft (35.3 sq m), however it also comes in a more spacious version with a separate bedroom, plus an even larger one measuring a considerable 750 sq ft (almost 70 sq m), with two bedrooms. Other colors and finishes are available too.

To focus on the model shown, which is a show home arranged more like an ADU than a tiny house, it's finished in wood and steel, with a distinctive almost sawtooth-like roofline. It's accessed by a sliding glass door and a deck area. The interior proper is taken up by an open living area with a sofa, which could perhaps be swapped out for a sofa bed or Murphy style bed to turn it into a usable retreat, since it has no dedicated bedroom in this configuration. Nearby is a home office made up of a desk and a chair.

It all looks very high-end for a tiny house, and materials include oak and limestone, plus polished chrome handles, as well as less obvious touches like a smartphone-controlled energy system and Wi-Fi-connected lighting.

The Cosmic One's kitchen is well-stocked and includes a dishwasher, fridge, oven, induction stove, and sink
Cosmic Buildings

Elsewhere lies the kitchen, which is surprisingly well-stocked given its size. It has an oven and induction stove, plus a sink and lots of cabinetry. There's a Wi-Fi-connected fridge hidden behind the cabinetry too as well as a dishwasher, which is a real luxury in a tiny house. The entire kitchen area can be closed off with multi-hinged doors. Another door in this area leads into the bathroom, which includes a toilet, shower, and a vanity sink.

The Cosmic One gets power from a roof-based solar panel and battery setup as standard but this can be optionally upgraded with additional batteries and a greywater filtration system if the owner wants to go fully off-grid.

The Cosmic One is marketed more towards the higher end of the tiny house space and starts at US$279,000. As of writing it's currently only available in California, however the plan is to eventually offer it elsewhere.

Source: Cosmic Buildings

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7 comments
Uncle Anonymous
With a little bit of land and a good well, a guy could have a really nice "get away from it all" retreat with one of these.
veryken
For these decorated boxes that they call micro houses or ADUs, there will be logical and physical limits on what can be done. This does not even come close to the limits, which include cost or market efficiency. It's just another wooden box with large windows in yet another style. Okay, it has some solar on top. So the outrageously high price becomes a hilarious strikeout.
rgbatduke
Sawtooth roof -- seriously? It'll trap leaves, dirt, and snowfall. I'm not even sure if it would satisfy roofing codes in all states. Next, 380 sf for $280,000 is ballpark $736 per square foot. That seems excessive even for California, which admittedly lives in a space all its own. That is almost 4x the average cost per square foot in North Carolina for what amounts to a high-end prefab house, not even "real" on-site construction. Even with solar built in and high end appliances, I can't see this as being worth more than $100,000, and I'd bet one could find plenty of contractors willing to build you an equivalent space for little more than this, or you could build it yourself for even less. Dwellito sells a bunch of modular homes for far, far less per square foot, leaving you plenty of money to install solar or upscale appliances.
spyinthesky
Sure does seem expensive, certainly unless you have some spare land for free just sitting there going to waste. Even then what profit would you make in selling it thereafter.
Saigvre
Flood prone. Still, if I wanted to pose as a near-legit squatter on the roof above a box store, this might be my go-to. Just have to make it right with the Postal Service and have lighter than air emergency and guest access...legit reasons to pass FD inspection and PV panels...
Saigvre
You'd have to love whatever high ventilation thing the roof brought, I'd think.
rjm
Pricing a joke, we built a 550 square foot mini house fully kitted out including full plumbing and electrical hook ups for 100k. Toss another 20k on and it would be fully solar like this.