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Thread: Most important features in a new prepper home

  1. #1
    Where's the epi?


    ladyhk13's Avatar
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    Most important features in a new prepper home

    As many of you know we will be building a new home on some property. As I try to decide the most important things a prepper needs in a home I thought I would get your thoughts. I know storage for food is a must but how much and where do you put it? Do you have a mud room that is separate from the other rooms? Is it more of a porch that is an outside space? We now have 2 very large dogs who like to get dirty and I need some way to clean them off before letting them in the house, is your ironing space in your laundry room? Do you have a canning kitchen? If so, is it a building apart from the house or do you use your normal kitchen? Do you have a craft room of your own and DH have a room to his self for a hobby (reloading)?
    If you were to design the perfect prepper house, what would you put in it? I would like ideas from the practical to the "I wish list" type like saferoom designs. DH found a basic house design he likes that looks like a barn....hmmmm, ok so I thought if we did that and used the same design for that and our real barns from the air it would look like no one really lived there but maybe more of a place where someone just kept animals any maybe that would be better for OPSEC? So, using that ouside design I have 3 levels (basement) to design in. So what would you put in it if it was yours? So my prepping family, wanna have some fun? Remember this is a prepper house but we have to live in it too and be oriented around family and friends.

  2. #2
    Crotch Rocket


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    LHK,

    The Reader's Digest book, "Back to Basics" has an excellent section on homes. Off the top of my head, the mud room would be great for containing messes and energy efficiency. They also stated a square, two story home is very good for energy efficiency as well. You can get a passive solar effect if you place a greenhouse on the south side of the home, in addition to having food sources it provides. Where I live I figured an attached garage on the north side would block the coldest winds and further improve energy efficiency.

    My craziest idea for my own home involved having a walk out basement portion directly under a front porch that looks like an underground patio, but could double as cold storage or be reinforced as a dug in fighting position

    Geo thermal heating seems to be very effective around here.

    I've noticed that bay windows could be easily reinforced from the interior, making it harder to get past or pull off. Especially with a durable exterior, such as stone. I'd love to do a slipform stone exterior and a steel roof when I eventually get to build. Some people put a fire suppression system (sprinklers) along their roof to help there as well.

    "Back to Basics" has several more ideas on things like alternative sanitation and landscaping as well, much of which can and would incorporate well into a prepper's lifestyle.
    Consilio et animis

    Essayons!

  3. #3
    Where's the epi?


    ladyhk13's Avatar
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    MTR, those are not crazy ideas at all. Those are exactly some of the same ideas I have been having. A solarium on the south side is a must. A large open concept kitchen/living room/dining room area for family and friends/holidays is a must and would like it in the center of the house or at one side of the house. I want the master suite on one side or floor of the house and other rooms on the other because I think my mom will be living with us until she passes so we want privacy for all. We would give her the main master and then take it over later. The main master should be on the first floor and the others up top or in the basement and need to be large as well (at least 2 of them have to be 15x15). I would like a secret room that is not like a little closet but a place we could actually be in for a period of time, a lot of food storage space but where do I put that???? The floor plan is killing me!

  4. #4
    Crotch Rocket


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    PM inbound. I don't want my secret room idea on the open forum
    Consilio et animis

    Essayons!

  5. #5
    I'll most likely shit myself



    bacpacker's Avatar
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    Lady my plans, if they are ever implemented, call for a big room in the basement or off the basement by itself to use as a "safe room" type area. Protection from tornado's would be very high. It would also provide some, depending on construction, from a nuclear accident or blast. It would be set up for heavy storage, cooking, sleeping, cleaning, and a small comms area. The basement itself would include a work area for electronics, reloading, repairs, etc. We also keep our freezers in the basement, it's got much less temp swings than anywhere else. Currently we park our cars in the basement but I would like to get them into a attached garage. The basement would also have a large bathroom with a garden sink, toliet, and huge walk in shower, also a large closet. The rest could be finished as a "den" area or bedrooms. I also want a root cellar off of it or built as a cold room itself.
    1st floor would hold the kitchen/dining, and living area in a large area Kitchen will have plenty of cabinets and counter space This floor should have a bedroom/bath off to a side away from the main traffic area. I think a half bath near the living area would be good also. One more thing we want on the main floor is a good size room, which could be a bedroom, to use as a pantry/storage area.
    We enjoy having our bedroom upstairs, but as you age that becomes more of an issue. It probably would be better to have 2nd, third, etc bedrooms up and the master on the main level. For my own privacy I would want the master area to be off by itself as much as possible.

    You have a lot to think and plan for. This is an exciting time, Enjoy. I can't wait to see what everyone suggestions are.

  6. #6
    Garden? I'll show you a garden....
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    I see these big big big home plans...we're going polar opposite. We want smaller, not bigger....under 1200 sq ft, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, great room/kitchen and a giant 12 x 12 pantry. The older I get...the less I want to clean a big house...and the older I get the harder it is to keep up with farming and a big house...which Lady you really need to think about unless you are going to have a maid...and retain that maid post shtf. Dabbling in gardening is one thing...living off your land is an entirely different thing I am not sure you understand the work involved...and here I have 1700 sq ft and it about kills me to keep up with it and 7 acres...you're talking about what was it 150 acres and a giant house...good luck with that...just being a voice of reason...don't shoot me.

    The only thing I will have as a luxury is a summer kitchen and a root cellar....both outside the house. We're doing solar/wind turbine at our new place...I don't totally understand how it all works but if your DH hit Big J up..he has it all sqaured away already.
    ***************************
    I am up with a goat, a first freshener who thinks she wants to go into labor a month early...they get braxton hicks like humans...anyhow..I reread this and I want to make my point clear.

    I am not trying to be a snit...but my understanding from reading your posts was this was a permanent BOL come lifestyle change for you and your DH where you were going to start producing all your own food etc. I do that right now...minus grains, on 7 acres and have here for the past 4 years and previously on 5 acres for 6 years...and guess what...IT IS ALOT OF WORK. You have to Plant/Preserve/Provision all of that...guess what making even a loaf of bread from scratch takes time...if you are doing that for all of your food...thats alot of work....was my primary point. Couple that with 3 stories of cleaning and maintenance...for two people and an elderly woman...thats alot of work...unrealistic in my personal opinion....unless a couple of things 1) you are filthy rich and have a live in staff in which case LIVE IT UP, who cares disregard me...2) You intend on this being a BOL for multiple families in which case...then my question is: what is your governing strategy post and preshtf? And how do you plan on getting everyone there in even tof shtf? Those are two very interesting questions I'd love to hear more about for my own benefit as well.
    Last edited by ravensgrove; 01-16-2012 at 10:17 AM.

  7. #7
    Grand Poobah of the Smart Car Appreciation Society
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    One of the main reason why i chose a completely underground home-shelter set up was the basic fact as i get older i can not afford to heat & cool a large home on my socalled retirement budget and my simple shotgun style round tube shelter set up works great for me .

    Plus given the fact that if Full Scale NBC war happened or some other type of diaster i would be protected simplely by beening out of harm way under 16.ft of dirt and rock on top of me with a protected incomeing air supply system to keep me alive and kicking in the end

    Some people can not live underground in a total buried house and not have sunlight to wake them up or the sounds of the night to help them sleep .One of my lady friends who i see can not spend the night in the place without having it drive her nuts or batty because of the lack of sound of the vehicles going down the highway or nights sounds it total quiet in the place .But for me it works because of the simple fact i sleep like a log with no sound or light to wake me up and that very inportant because of beening a night worker in my job .

    I also have what is called SAD lights that makes the socalled fake sunlight and have a star mural over the bed to help with the socalled lack of sun or night inside the place .I use the sad light to wake up to in the evening to set my body alarm clock to get up and use the other sad light in the living room area of the place to light up the place when i'm getting ready for work .By the time i leave the house at 8.30.pm i'm wide wake and ready to start work at 10.pm for my night shift

    You spend only about 10.hours a day inside your home when not working your socalled work hours and when i'm off i'm out doing something like cleaning up the outside area of where i'm liveing or going into town for supplies or going to the movies or doing laundry at a my cross the road friend home .She got my brand new washer & dryer from kenmore when i moved back home and we made a deal where i use it anytime i need in the garage area .So it work's for me in the long run .

  8. #8
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    When we were designing the house that never got built, we had a safe room in the basement. People who designed it obviously never designed one because the door swung outward instead of inward and it enclosed the furnace and water heaters. I also wanted a patio with an outdoor kitchen under a large pergola so I could make a greenhouse out of it if I wanted to. The one thing I like about the house I have now is that we can get from our bedroom to my daughter's bedroom via the crawlspace in our closets. The access panels are hidden and screwed in, so she can't just pop into our bedroom any time she wants, but we can get to her or vise versa if needed.

    Oh, and we were going to have a hand-held shower set up in our garage to hose the dogs off before they got in the house. That would have been awesome. As it is, the dog comes right into the eat in kitchen area from the yard, and my husband comes into the way too small laundry room from the garage and smacks me in the ass every time I am doing laundry. You would think that was sexy, but no.

  9. #9
    A laugh a minute
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    Will PM you later to explain why this is so to the point.


    Here are some things we have done to make life a little easier on the home front.

    We have rain, snow, some times water rises. (not floods), ice, rocks and lots of MUD when it rains. All of this will enter your home if you do not stop it. Thru trial and era, we have finally found out how to keep it all outside. We have a porch with three steps going up. At the bottom of the first step, we have a wading pool. (We cut 6” off the bottom of a 55 gal. plastic barrel and have water in it.) This is where we wash the bottom of our shoes, (Boots mostly) using a toilet brush. Then next to the door of the house (all doors), we have a floor brush we scrape our shoes on before entering. We bought the large push broom heads (the hard bristle broom, (Not the nylon ones.) We cut them in half where the whole is to put the handle. Wa La you now have two. We screwed them into the floor of the porch and we just run our shoes over them. This way the floors stay somewhat clean and you don’t have to take them off every time you go inside.

    Where you are, you would need a mudroom/ laundry room. I would put this off the side or back porch. You enter the mudroom from the porch, where you can take off the boots, jackets coveralls ect. Then enter the bathroom, which will enter the main house. I want mine to enter next to the kitchen in the back. That way I can go straight from the bathroom with the dirty clothes to the Mudroom/laundry room, and then out to the clothesline.
    As far as a HIS room and a HER room I think every house should have one even if it is a small room. I sew, do crafts, and write books. Which everyone knows unless you are dying do not bother me when I am in MY room. Men need their MAN CAVE too. Kids can go into their bedroom shut the door and have privacy but when you share a bedroom, you cannot do that. If you can put a basement in then do so. There you can have space for hidden rooms ( but remember the first place to look for those rooms is in the basement. So hide it well. Also do not put your hidden room behind a bookshelf, a closet, or behind the pantry, or in the kitchen floor. These are also where to look for them. (Will put ideas in PM)

  10. #10
    I'll most likely shit myself



    bacpacker's Avatar
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    Lady, I went back and reread my post and found I had combined thoughts on my future BOL and your soon to be house. Our house now is 1450 sq ft on two stories, plus a full unfinished basement of probably 900 sq ft. Our next place will either be an underground all on one level or a single floor w/ basement I agree with Raven in that I want a small house, but a basement is a critical factor for me. We use it for many purposes including storage, hold the freezers, park the cars, gonna set up my reloading bench, small work shop.
    Sorry for the confusion.

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