Australia Begins Approving Alternative Forms of Housing



The question of what is considered housing is not just a US problem. Australia is also seeing many new forms of housing hitting the market including Tiny Houses on Wheels, ADUs, tents, RVs and Yurts.

Are they handling it any better than the US?

Australia’s coastal cities and surrounding hinterlands have long been popular with tourists, sea-changers and retirees. But they have a darker side. In the early morning, you will often find car parks crowded with cars, vans, caravans and even tents, where refugees from the housing crisis have spent the night.

People of all ages, including families with children, are cooking breakfast, using the cold-water showers and packing up for another day, always trying to keep one step ahead of council officers or police. These unhoused people don’t conform to homeless stereotypes. Many have jobs and children in school and no serious mental or physical health problems. They simply cannot find an affordable home to rent, or have lost or are unable to buy a home of their own.

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