Look inside this millennial’s tiny home in the woods of Denmark

For years, 36-year-old Anders Boisen lived in apartments all over the city of Aarhus, the second-largest in Denmark.

Despite having a comfortable living situation — a two-bedroom apartment he shared with a girlfriend at the time — and a job working in city development at a local municipality, Boisen tells CNBC Make It he felt confined by his lifestyle and the societal pressure of what life should look like at his age.

“I had this claustrophobic feeling about living in an apartment, not so much because of the size of it but more because of the lifestyle that seems so predefined,” he says.

It took Boisen around eight months to finish building his tiny home in the woods.

Anders Boisen

During that time, Boisen came across a YouTube Channel that featured people living in tiny homes that were totally off the grid.

“I thought it was very inspirational, and it opened my eyes to a new possibility where I could actually live more economically free, and I could also live relatively sustainably,” he says. “If I could build a house that is off the grid and in sync with nature, then maybe I could learn how to get a better sense of life on a philosophical level.”

Boisen left his apartment and moved into a garden house where he came up with the idea to build a tiny home of his own. In 2018, Boisen started building a mobile one, but it was stolen just a few months later.

“It was all over the news here in Denmark, but we didn’t find it,” Boisen says.

Boisen’s bedroom is a lofted area above the kitchen area.

Anders Boisen

But Boisen didn’t give up and started building another the following year. In the spring of 2020, Boisen finished the tiny home after working on it on and off for eight months.

He did most of the building himself and estimates he spent 80,000 to 90,000 Danish Krone or USD $11,366 to $12,787.

The tiny house is six and a half meters long and two and a half meters wide, or 21.3 feet long by 6.6 feet wide.

At the time, Boisen lived on a piece of land he he’d been renting for over a year.

To finish building the tiny home, Boisen quit his job and focused on the project full-time. He also started a Facebook group to share his journey, and some of the people he met there helped with the building process along the way.

“I realized how personalized this home already was because I had built most of it on my own, so it was filled with my own memories and personal decisions,” he says. “But it also had the memories of all the people who came and helped out. It was qualitatively very different from what I imagine, having a contractor build a house for you.”

Since quitting his job, Boisen has made his career creating content for YouTube and giving talks around the country on tiny living and life off-the-grid.

Boisen’s kitchen features a mini stove and a lot of shelves for storage.

Anders Boisen

While Boisen has fond memories of building his tiny home, he admits there were many technical issues along the way, including having to move the house itself and a hole in the roof.

“At that time I hadn’t secured the framing enough so it wasn’t stabilized. When I moved the house, it ended up tilted to one side, and it was hard to correct it later on,” Boisen says.

“It was a setback and I was kind of bummed out. In my dreams I dreamt about burning the house down because then I would get rid of the problem. But, of course, I didn’t do it but it was very stressful,” he adds laughing.

Despite those challenges, Boisen says there is no greater feeling than seeing the tiny home he built be finished.

“There were bad things but it was a nice feeling knowing I was creating something that will be my home. You get this giddy feeling because you’re so excited about the things that you’re doing. It was like realizing a dream,” Boisen says. “I wasn’t just building something like a roof over my head; I was actually building a dream. It was like stepping into a new chapter in my life and all the things that will hopefully follow in that life.”

Opposite the kitchen is the living area and a mudroom.

Anders Boisen

In September 2021, Boisen bought a plot of land about 17,800 square feet outside of Aarhus for 160,000 Danish Krone, or USD $22,791, according to documents reviewed by CNBC Make It.

“It’s at the end of a dirt road and it doesn’t have immediate neighbors. It also has a meadow and a big forest adjacent to it so it feels a lot bigger than it really is,” Boisen says.

A month later, Boisen had the tiny home moved from the property he was renting to the land he now owns.

The bedroom has a small window and a skylight.

Anders Boisen

Living off the grid in a forest

Boisen made sure his tiny home was equipped for life off the grid, which he defines as “self-sufficient with water, electricity, and heat.”

The house has a rainwater filtration system, solar panels, and batteries to store energy.

Boisen has lived in the tiny home for over four years now and says he’s run out of power several times and water just once.

Now he keeps a close eye on his water tank, takes short baths if his tank is starting to run low, and aims to save water in other ways.

“I tend to think I need power but then I think to myself is it the lack of power or is it how much power I’m actually consuming and that’s been part of my journey,” he says.

Boisen built an outhouse to give guests some privacy.

Anders Boisen

In the winter, Boisen uses less power and lives more sustainably by storing certain items like milk and condiments outside in the cold instead of using electricity for a fridge.

“The point of this house is to teach me how to consume less resources and that was part of the idea from the beginning,” Boisen says. “I wanted to see how low you can go in terms of still living comfortably in a tiny house. My journey is to not only make the tiny home liveable but also adjust my need for resources and my behavior. The house nudges my behavior in a way.”

The tiny home has solar panels and batteries to store energy.

Anders Boisen

Boisen also has a permaculture garden — which Better Homes and Gardens defines as one that helps build soils and doesn’t rely on synthetic inputs” — where he’s growing potatoes, several berries, apples, leeks, cabbage, and different kinds of herbs.

“I try to plant permanent plants that will give me a yield for the greatest amount of time,” he says. “I will be expanding my entire food production because right now it’s only on an experiment level, but from next season, I will expand the size of the garden considerably.”

Boisen says growing his own food is an extension of his original journey to trying to be self-sufficient.

“On a personal level it teaches me how I can be more in sync with the seasons and with nature in general. In order for me to grow food, I need to learn a whole lot about gardening. It gives me joy that every season has its own types of foods so you’re always looking forward to something and you’re always eating food that is local and seasonal.”

Boisen uses his food scraps to feed his chickens and composts it to use for the soil in his garden.

Boisen bought the plot of land where his tiny home sits in 2021.

Anders Boisen

Since finishing up the initial work on the tiny home, Boisen has added a mud room and upgraded the water filtration system. He’s getting ready to build a new house and sell this one.

Boisen says the plan is to build a tiny home that is more practical for having a family and continuing a self-sufficient lifestyle: “I’m in a way, preparing for the future.”

He plans to finish the new home next spring.

Conversions to USD were done on November 15, 2024, using OANDA conversion rates. All amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.

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