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Moving to a small space provokes changes of all kinds; Tuff Shed branches out into shelter; and the practicalities of towing a tiny house.
On Monday, KPIX 5 asked Oakland city leaders if the Tuff Sheds, which are supposed to help the homeless, are doing enough to remedy the city's homeless problem.
It's been exactly one month since the city of Oakland constructed Tuff Sheds to try to house at least some of the city's growing homeless population. During that time, the city has moved out ...
Oakland's first 'Tuff Shed' camp is gone. The city's year-long lease with a private developer at 6th and Brush streets in West Oakland ended this month and the city took away the 20 sheds that ...
California cities turn Tuff Sheds into shelters for homeless, and Denver company is delighted Tuff Sheds have been used to create small communities since 2004 ...
Tuff Shed, a builder who partners with Home Depot, offers sheds that make it easy, such as the two-story Sundance TR-1600 model (though it’s currently unavailable).
For their two-story tiny home, the Smiths used Tuff Shed’s TR-1600, which was sold at Home Depot at the time, as their shell. Unfortunately, Tuff Shed tweeted that this model is no longer available.
Oakland’s creative solution to its homelessness crisis is getting a mixed reception from the people it’s meant to help.
Oakland city leaders have come up with a constructive, temporary fix for the homeless crisis in that city. They are putting up experimental shelters in the form of storage sheds.
While Green Sheds start off at $18,000, Ralph ordered and custom-designed his Tuff Shed online for $5,000. With five weeks turnaround time, a crew built it in half a day.
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