For my husband and me, 2014 has been all about downsizing: we got rid of 80 percent of our belongings, moved out of San Francisco and into my parents’ home, and are currently building a 131-square-foot tiny house on wheels. While this path to minimalism is winding, our goal remains clear: to experiment and create a home that makes sense for us. Here are four pieces exploring different approaches to space and home—from living on wheels to escaping the grid.

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1. ā€œLets Get Smallā€ (Alec Wilkinson, The New Yorker, July 2011)

For tiny house owners, less is more. With no mortgage and the debt of a big house—and more time and money to spend on things that matter to them—tiny house enthusiasts are paving their own paths to simpler, self-sustainable lifestyles. Wilkinson talks to self-proclaimed claustrophile Jay Shafer on living small, and his journey from unknown artist to today’s leader of the tiny house movement.

2. ā€œMy Road to Hell Was Pavedā€ (Ann Patchett, Outside, May 2004)

Author Ann Patchett tours the Big West, through the Badlands and Yellowstone, in a rented 29-foot Winnebago called Minnie. Initially ashamed by her adventure in a giant, gas-guzzling RV, she grows fond of Minnie and the convenience and comfort of her motor home, believing it has set her free. ā€œI feel like I went out to report on the evils of crack and have come back with a butane torch and a pipe,ā€ she writes.

3. ā€œThe Ghost Communeā€ (Michelle Nijhuis, Aeon, October 2013)

Over 20 years ago, seven friends bought cheap land in Colorado: 80 acres to make their dreams and DIY lives a reality, to live off the sun and rainwater, and to escape from a wasteful society. Nijhuis lived there with her family for 15 years before reaching the limits of the land, finally moving on. ā€œUnplugging from the electrical grid was easy, or relatively so. What we didn’t realise was that we needed the human grid, too.ā€

4. ā€œEarthship, New Mexicoā€ (Samara Reigh, The Brooklyn Rail, June 2012)

ā€œI love America so much that I want to see it reborn.ā€ Reigh recounts her experiences in dry, desolate New Mexico, living in Taos in an earthship: an eco-structure built halfway into the hill, cooled and heated by the earth. In a neighborhood of pyramids, tin castles, yurts, teepees, and other earthships—where building codes are not enforced—Reigh learns that in New Mexico, nobody is watching, yet everything is possible.

Photo: Tiny House in a Windstorm, Tammy Strobel/Flickr, (CC BY 2.0)

Cheri has been an editor at Longreads since 2014.