The Tiny Home Builder Who Opened a Village in Florida Now Offers More Than 10 Models
Escape made a splash by launching a property in Tampa Bay filled with its trailers. But you don’t have to live there to own one.
Escape made a splash by launching a property in Tampa Bay filled with its trailers. But you don’t have to live there to own one.
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Escape was founded in 2014, but its roots reach back to Canoe Bay in northwest Wisconsin. Company founder Dan Dobrowolski’s family had lived in the area for three generations, and, wanting to share it with others, decided to turn it into a destination. When a 1960s summer lodge was put up for sale in 1991, he bought it and spent the next few years converting it into a resort with cottages.
Twenty years on, Dobrowolski was ready for a new—but not altogether unfamiliar—challenge. He enlisted the help of architects John Rattenbury (a student of Frank Lloyd Wright) and Kelly Davis to design a smaller, portable version of the Canoe Bay cottages. In the decade since it was founded, Escape has developed 11 different tiny home models, and has used a few of them to create a tiny home village in Tampy Bay, Florida. Here, Dobrowolski tells us about Escape’s various designs and collaborations.
See the full story on Dwell.com: The Tiny Home Builder Who Opened a Village in Florida Now Offers More Than 10 Models
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