The Key to People Havens

The New York Times barks up the people haven tree this weekend with the arrival of the Fall edition of Key, their seasonal real estate/home magazine.

Cave living in southern Spain:

“People thought I was mad,” says Jim Butler, a retired English chauffeur, who has lived in his three-bedroom, one-bath cave in the Spanish province of Granada for around 18 months. “But I tell them, try a cave. It’s fantastic.”

Adult treehouses:

“Although it’s a luxurious kind of nature. It isn’t camping.”

Remote controlled houses:

Will West, the C.E.O. of Control4 and the father of six children, uses his own home-automation system for everything from monitoring the comings and goings of his 18-year-old son (he can program the security system to e-mail or text him with the time his son enters the house at night) to listening to three kinds of music in his bathroom at once (he has 3 zones of audio in his bathroom and 21 zones in other parts of the house).

And an artist collective inhabiting a beach house.

Plus a lovely front cover by Andy Gilmore.

Skeptical? Well, these aren’t your dank, caveman-movie grottoes. They’re dry and whitewashed clean, and they have windows and all the modern conveniences: electricity, running water, telephone, cable and parking.

cf

In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit. Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry, bare, sandy hole with nothing in it to sit down on or to eat: it was a hobbit-hole, and that means comfort.


andy gilmore’s page reminds me of jahmad’s friend tauba (remember from that one swimming hole trip where I was driving? she kept freaking out that i was going to kill us all?)

http://www.taubaauerbach.com/works.july27.2008.html


we should implement autolinking for comments, eh?


cf jennifer daniel. (and check that awesome domain name.)