Design, Compliance, and Execution

Author Interview
David Antonacci Author Interview

The Teeny Tiny Guide to Living Big in a Small Space shows how tiny home living can unlock freedom, clarity, and intention by offering readers practical guidance and real-life insight. What first drew you to tiny home living, beyond the trend or aesthetics?

What first drew me to tiny home living wasn’t the trend or the aesthetics at all — it was the problem it solved.

I kept seeing good people doing everything “right” and still feeling stuck: massive mortgages, years of financial pressure, and homes that owned them instead of the other way around. The size of the house kept growing, but freedom kept shrinking. Tiny homes flipped that equation.

What really hooked me was the idea that space should earn its keep. When you design within constraints, you’re forced to be intentional — about layout, storage, light, and how you actually live day to day. That mindset creates clarity far beyond housing.

Tiny homes also remove unnecessary friction:

  1. Less debt
  2. Fewer ongoing costs
  3. Faster builds
  4. Less maintenance
  5. More flexibility in how and where people live
  6. But the biggest draw for me was control. Tiny home living gives people the ability to make a decisive move forward instead of waiting years to feel secure enough to live the life they want.

That’s why this book isn’t about living small — it’s about living deliberately. Tiny homes just happen to be one of the most powerful tools I’ve seen for making that possible.

What misconception about tiny homes did you most want to challenge, and what mistakes do first-time tiny home buyers make most often?

The biggest misconception I’ve always wanted to challenge is that tiny homes are somehow “lesser” homes — temporary, non-compliant, or only suitable for weekend use.

In reality, a well-designed tiny or modular home can be a fully compliant, Class 1A, permanent residence that meets the same building standards as a traditional house. Steel framing, engineered foundations, proper insulation, energy ratings, and council approvals all matter. Size doesn’t determine quality or legality — design, compliance, and execution do.

As for first-time buyers, the most common mistakes I see are:

  1. Focusing on price before compliance
    Many buyers are drawn to the cheapest option without realising it may not be council-approvable, financeable, or insurable. A bargain build can quickly become an expensive mistake if it can’t be legally lived in.
  2. Not understanding their land and council requirements early enough
    Zoning, overlays, setbacks, BAL ratings, and access can all affect what’s possible. People often buy a home first and ask questions later — it should be the other way around.
  3. Underestimating how important layout is
    In a smaller footprint, every millimetre counts. Poor layouts lead to regret fast. First-timers often prioritise features over flow and liveability.
  4. Assuming all “tiny home” builders are the same
    There’s a huge difference between a trailer-based novelty build and a properly engineered modular home. Buyers don’t always realise that until it’s too late.
  5. Not thinking long-term
    A tiny home should still work for future needs — resale, rentals, ageing, or family changes. First-time buyers often design for now instead of what’s next.

At the end of the day, the goal isn’t just to go smaller — it’s to live smarter, without sacrificing comfort, compliance, or peace of mind.

Downsizing can feel scary—how do you help readers work through that fear?

Downsizing is scary — and I think the first step is not pretending it isn’t. Most people aren’t just downsizing their space; they’re downsizing habits, expectations, and sometimes even parts of their identity. So we start by acknowledging that fear as completely normal.

I help people work through it by reframing what downsizing actually means. It’s not about giving things up — it’s about choosing what truly earns its place in your life. When people realise they’re not losing comfort or quality, but instead gaining clarity, freedom, and financial breathing room, the fear starts to soften.

Practically, we break it down into steps:

  1. We visualise daily life, not just floor plans — where you make your coffee, sit at night, work, and relax.
  2. We focus on smart design and storage, showing how a smaller home can still feel open, calm, and generous.
  3. We talk through real numbers — lower mortgages, fewer bills, less maintenance — because peace of mind is incredibly grounding.
  4. And we encourage people to take it gradually. Downsizing doesn’t have to be abrupt or extreme; it can be intentional and empowering.

Most importantly, I remind people that a home should support your life, not weigh it down. Once that clicks, downsizing stops feeling like a loss — and starts feeling like a relief.

How can readers use this book even if they never move into a tiny home?

This book isn’t only about tiny homes — it’s about intentional living.

Even if a reader never moves into a tiny home, they can use the book as a practical guide to simplifying decisions, space, and lifestyle. The principles apply just as powerfully to a family home, an apartment, or even a busy work life.

Readers can use it to:

  1. Re-evaluate what they actually need versus what they’ve accumulated
  2. Design their spaces — and routines — more deliberately
  3. Reduce financial and mental clutter
  4. Make smarter choices about spending, storage, and layout
  5. Feel more in control of their environment instead of being overwhelmed by it

At its core, the book helps people ask better questions:
What do I use every day? What adds value? What’s just taking up space — physically or mentally?

You don’t have to live small to live well. The lessons in this book are about clarity, freedom, and alignment, and those are useful no matter where — or how — you live.

Author Links: Website

Posted on February 7, 2026, in Interviews and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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