The next time you park your car in the garage, it'll be hard not to start dreaming up an extravagant renovation plan after you see what one Seattle-based visual and performance artist did with a tiny, tired car port.
Ira Lippke/The New York Times/Redux Michelle de la Vega acted as her own general contractor, transforming her one-car garage into a fully functioning, 250-square-foot home that's nothing short of a cozy paradise. According to
The New York Times, de la Vega pulled off the whole renovation for under $$,000. The space now includes a sleeping loft, a bathroom, and a wood-burning stove, as well as furniture pieces that were either custom-built or salvaged, refurbished, and repurposed by de la Vega herself.
Now, prepare to be marveled by this clever, space-saving garage transformation:
Interior | BeforeInterior | AfterMichelle de la Vega at her home in Seattle on April 12, 2010. Keeping expenses down by serving as the general contractor and by using pieces she found in industrial salvage yards, de la Vega turned her garage into a 250-square-foot house for $$,000.Ira Lippke/The New York Times/Redux
Read more about Michelle's garage-to-tiny home conversion at
The New York Times.
From: Country Living US
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