Living in Quonset Hut Homes

Five years of residing in a unique steel structure has given the author insights into the quirks and qualms of this nontraditional housing.

By Kristin Grant
Updated on October 23, 2022
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by Kristin Grant
Quonset huts are lightweight structures of corrugated galvanized steel that doesn’t require interior wall supports.

Read this five-year retrospective on what it’s like living in a Quonset hut home in the American midwest and decide if you’d give Quonset hut houses a try.

Nontraditional housing wasn’t necessarily something I was interested in when my husband and I were working on plans for building our new home. However, between our circumstances, our budget, and being open to something different, we ended up with a home that definitely fits in the nontraditional category.

While we were researching our options, a few factors dictated our final decision. For one, we wanted to do a lot of the building ourselves. We knew we’d save money with sweat equity, but we had limited building experience, so whatever we chose had to be something we could either learn or figure out. Second, we didn’t want a basement, as we had endured all kinds of basement issues in the past with other homes. However, I had grown up in Kansas, a state that comes with its own tornado season, so I wanted something that felt safe in a bad storm. Even though northern Wisconsin doesn’t see a lot of tornados, we do still have the occasional high winds and big thunderstorms. The final factor was our budget. While doing a lot of the work ourselves helped, we still had to be able to afford to put in a driveway, bring electricity up from the road, put in a well, and hire a plumber and an electrician.

Enter Quonset Hut Houses

We looked into traditional stick-built homes, yurt kits, pole barns, steel containers, and various tiny home options. Without a basement, a lot of those options didn’t feel safe enough, and some of them, once we had priced them out, were outside our budget. Other factors arose that were out of our control, specifically building permits and bank stipulations. Every state is different, and permits can also vary by county. We had to put in a holding tank for our septic instead of a mound system. The bank, since we were going to have a traditional mortgage, required things like hardwall (aka no yurt) and traditional plumbing (even though we had a composting toilet).

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