Hi Stacie,
Welcome to the forum first off !
And a Very Interesting undertaking you have going on !
I thought I'd give you a couple/few links for inspiration if
you don't mind.
The original [German] Knaus Schwalbennest [Swallows nest]
TTT was made in 1961. Here is the 50th Anniversary, tweaked version:
http://tinyhouseblog.com/travel-trailer ... albennest/If you notice, the floorplan is similar to your original side-by-side plan of
sleeping/activity on one side and the cabinets/storage on the other. The difference
seems to be it splits the storage into two areas either side of the entry door.
Perhaps that'd be useful for you as well, as that would allow the full interior width
of the middle of the trailer body to be utilized for activity.
Also Andrew has a similar sized Wanderer 8 and 10 plan:
http://www.angib.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/t ... tear59.htm I know you mentioned that you are of a petite body size, but I wonder
if some of your potential activity area sizes will actually work - i.e. a 20in
square shower base/area. It will be difficult for for even a petite person
to go through all the bathing motions in that small of an area, manouevering
the water wand and bending over will be close to impossible. Since the
shower will be portable for indoor use, you could just buy a 32in square plastic
showerbase and utilize that to provide a roomier area for bathing, In essence,
the whole interior of the trailer will become the bathroom when you are showering
[a very useful thing I think] so that should fit.
Even though you aren't exactly planning this method, here is a great design
for a built-in shower pan in the floor, I always thought such would be a good idea
to incorporate. I would have the built-in shower pan covered by a lift-up floor panel
that could be/incorporate part of the shower enclosure or be one of its walls that
you could mount a folding shower curtain "U" rod on etc..
http://www.imagine-trailvan.co.za/Comfo ... hroom.htmlSharon has good advice on the cabinets. I have a storage seat/stool [@ 18in W
by 18in H by 24in L] from an old 1950s house trailer that is made of 3/16in plywood
sides with 3/4in by 3/4in interior corner and perimeter and underneath pine framing,
with a 3/4in by 1&1/2in top opening perimeter framing [mainly so they could screw
on the top lid hinges] and a 3/8in to 1/2in thick plywood bottom and a
1/2in to 5/8in thick plywood lid/top - basically it was made from cut outs/offs of
building the house trailer. It is all glued together and it is extremely strong ! I'm
a Big guy and it holds me fine. Gluing it all together is one of the secrets.
As far as wall construction goes, check out linuxmanxxx's posts in the Foamy section.
He advocates, and has had great success with, minimal [basically edge and opening
perimeters] 1x framing [3/4in by 3/4in to 3/4in by up to 1&1/2in] and 3/4in thick
extruded foam sheets. [Single foam sheets for walls, double thickness (1&1/2in) foam
sheets for the roofs.] He laminates a thin plywood interior sheet to the foam and
an exterior plywood, aluminum or fiberglass sheet [and is to try Formica] for the exterior
wall covering using a water based 3M contact cement. Here is a link to a later thread
that he started:
http://tnttt.com/viewtopic.php?f=55&t=50213After bringing that up, click on his user name on the left, this will
bring up his Viewing Profile. Under "User Statistics" in the lower right, click on
"Search user's posts", this will bring up all the posts he has done. Even though it may
seem a bit disjointed looking at them out of 'context', the details and info on his
method are in there. Looking at them this way is a heck-of-a-lot easier that trying to look
through all the various topic threads for his post's information.
Good luck with all your planning. Hopefully, everyone's "few cent's worth" can help you 'tweak'
your design in useful ways.
Cheers,
Norm/mezmo
If you have a house - you have a hobby.