Can tiny homes work in the Big Land? This Quebec company thinks so - Action News
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Can tiny homes work in the Big Land? This Quebec company thinks so

Nunavik Building says its modular homes are affordable and can withstand the harshest weather in the North.

Nunavik Building says its homes are designed to withstand extreme cold in the North

The first shipment of a tiny home and a four-bedroom model arrived by sealift in Nunavik this past summer. (Submitted )

A Quebec company thinks it hasa solution for housing challenges in Nunavik and other northern regions by fabricating modular tiny homes it says can stand up to the harsh climate and don't cost a fortune.

Willie Gadbois, the co-founder of Nunavik Building, says the first shipment of a tiny house and a four-bedroom model arrived in Kuujjuaq this past summer.

We put them together, it's like a plug-and-play house.- Willie Gadbois

He says building a home in Nunavik with outside contractors can run anywhere from $400,000 to $1 million.

"My challenge was to try to build houses that are affordable for the people, to be able to sell houses that are not expensive," Gadbois told CBC Radio'sLabrador Morning.

One of the company's tiny homes, pre-built in Sherbrooke costs about $228,000, Gadbois said, notingthat modules can be added to make two-, three- or four-bedroom houses, all of which arebrought on the sealift to Nunavik.

Heating costs

"People are always having problems with their heating or their houses are cold, they're not well insulated," he said.

Gadbois, a plumber and furnace man by trade, says the homes they build are warmer thanks to radiant floor heating and injected foam instead of fibreglass insulation in the walls, ceiling and floor, and that means heating costs are lower.

He notedthat steel siding and steel roofingadds durability in a regionthat's very cold.

This is the floor plan for a single-bedroom transition house that's prefabricated in Sherbrooke, Que. (Submitted )

Gadbois says he and his business partner, Claude Jannelle, have tried to simplify their homes so owners can fix any problems they encounter. He says there are contractors in Kuujjuaq who can fix furnace room issues, but the expertise to fix electrical panel problems isn't widely available in other communities in Nunavik.

"I try to put everything as simple as possible so if ever something happens to your house, that you be able to fix it yourself and for the heat consumption, save on fuel," hesaid.

Homeowners in the north

Gadbois said he's getting positive feedback on the company's homes.

Some people are waiting for a financial assistance program through the Kativik Municipal Housing Bureau to build the homes, he said,but that won't be available until 2021.

He said the Kativik Regional Government is also looking at his housing models, but no deals have been made yet.

"I'd love for the government go to forward with that, even Labrador or Nunavut, or N.W.T. if they look at our models. I'm open and ready to build houses for anyone in the North," he said.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador