IKEA’s Tiny Home Could Help Fight Against Climate Change

IKEA has produced a tiny house on wheels that could (and hopefully, will) inspired environmental and climate-friendly changes in the housing industry. The tiny house, a collaboration between IKEA, Vox Creative, and tiny home builder Escape, is a 187-square-foot model filled with IKEA furniture, topped with solar panels and stocked with an on-demand RV water heater, as EcoWatch details: 

According to NBC, it runs on electric and allows for off-the-grid living. The tiny building also emits zero pollution, including carbon. In fact, the only emissions come from the trailer being towed.
Manufactured structures are usually less wasteful than on-site constructions, according to Pebble Magazine. The interior's whitewashed panels are made from sustainably grown pine, reported Travel + Leisure, while the kitchen cupboards are made from recycled bottle tops. There is also a compostable toilet and a collapsible desk/kitchen table, Lonely Planet shared.
Abbey Stark, IKEA senior interior design leader, told Lonely Planet that she prioritized renewable, reusable and recycled materials to make the space "functional as well as beautiful." Stark designed the space as an IKEA show home with sustainable, multifunctional, space-saving and energy-efficient products, Lonely Planet reported.

Image via EcoWatch 


IKEA, polluting the world with cheap, disposable furniture for decades. Once upon a time, furniture was stuff that was built to last. Then the mass market appeal of cheap IKEA hit and people just change their furniture whenever they decide they want a style change. Not only that, but you may as well have a style change in the short term future, because that'll be around the time that the furniture starts to break in unfixable ways.
Since this tiny house is a rebrand, maybe it'll hold up well. But DAMN do I ever hate IKEA. Cheap garbage, and yet people seem to think it's all fine and normal to own their disposable, glued together, particle board furniture, for the short term that they last... then just toss it in the garbage and off to landfill it goes!!! My opinion... 100% from owning IKEA furniture, as well as the experiences of friends and family who have IKEA pieces.

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