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"When I say I have a treehouse business, this doesn't come to mind. People think it's on a small scale," Taylor told Insider. "But when I say it's a two-bedroom, one-bath, with a 400-square-foot living room, a hot tub, and a full kitchen, it kind of catches people off guard."
Taylor, an engineer who lives in the small town of Ladonia in Texas, first started building treehouses for his family five years ago.
"We have a personal treehouse that we built — it's a traditional treehouse supported by four trees," Taylor said. "We actually haven't finished it yet because this property became available. So I kind of got distracted from my own treehouse to start this treehouse business."
"I built a model to help me visualize what it would look like, because we literally built it without any plans," Taylor said.
His family has been using shipping containers for storage on their farm for years, and that gave him the idea to use them for his treehouse as well.
"It was really an 'aha!' moment. And now, being a short-term rental, that's part of the attraction," Taylor said.
"My father's an engineer too, so he gave me some suggestions. I got his input and together we came up with this design," Taylor said.
While scouting the site, the two of them even went up a construction lift to see what the view would be like from the top of their treehouse.
"I knew going into construction, that I would need a boom. Instead of renting one for a very long time, I bought one knowing I would need it for maintenance, window-washing, and even to fill our bird and animal feeders," Taylor added.
But there were no proper roads leading to the site, which meant that Taylor had to ship rock in from Oklahoma to create a gravel road for the heavy construction vehicles to access.
"It was just before COVID-19 came about. So once it started, we were pretty much in the woods and it didn't really slow us down because we were separated from everybody else," Taylor said.
"Our plan was to do as much construction on the ground as we could, just to make it easier," Taylor said.
Openings were cut into the walls for the windows, doors, and spaces where the containers would be connected with each other, he said.
"But we couldn't put the windows in on the ground because we didn't want them to crack from the movement as they got lifted," he added.
"You have to cut the floor, the ceiling, and the sides in an orientation that they're not going to be in the future," Taylor said. "The containers are lying down now, but when we pick them up, how do make sure you get the door in the right place?"
Since the containers are connected in pairs, Taylor also had to ensure that the doorways on the containers are aligned with each other so that people are able to pass through.
"It's somewhat inefficient on the ground because you have to take so much time to do it consciously, but it's still better than trying to do things while you're in the air," he added.
The steel beams in the tree were designed to hold up two containers, and putting one container up at a time made it unbalanced, Taylor said.
"We tried to do that pretty quickly to limit the time that one of them was up there by itself," he added.
"I had a couple of friends that are structural civil engineers. They helped me with the design of the steel structure in the tree and the foundation," Taylor said.
There were also professional welders, plumbers, and electricians who would come in to work on the treehouse, he added.
It was difficult to run wires and install water pipes as the walls in a shipping container are not as thick as those in a traditional house, Taylor said.
"We didn't have a set of plans. I pretty much had to tell people and sketch what was in my mind that I needed them to do," he said.
The white vertical container is where the bathroom and the two bedrooms are placed, while the red vertical container is the stairwell, Taylor said.
In all, the house has 85 staircase steps — including the 20-foot-tall spiral staircase outdoors, he said.
The horizontal containers are where the common spaces are: the living area, the kitchen and the dining room, as well as the balcony with the hot tub.
"This treehouse is welded to the ground, to 150,000 pounds of concrete plus the tree," Taylor added. "I would feel more safe in the treehouse than I would in our house in a high-wind situation."
Axel Springer, Insider Inc.'s parent company, is an investor in Airbnb.
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