He walks through his home visibly satisfied. The water is flowing, the extractor hood is working and in his mind he has already finished the interior. Nothing stops Dyon from moving into his tiny house.
Yesterday morning, the Andijker signed the rental contract and received the keys to his new home. Finally. Because in fact, the sixteen homes should have been occupied for a year.
He was one of almost 900 people interested in one of the sixteen houses. Clean2Anywhere’s flexible homes, built from waste plastic, should already be inhabited at the beginning of last year, for a period of 10 years. But that moment became postponed again and again.
Solution for acute housing shortage
The houses are seen as one of the solutions to the acute housing shortage, but due to the overcrowded power grid, electricity could not be installed. In addition, there were leaks and the roofs already had to be replaced.
Anneke Timmermans from Het Grootslag also came to take a look at the happy tenant yesterday. She was also very disappointed by the many delays and cited several causes.
“All new-build homes are structurally and technically checked before we can allocate them. Because these homes are delivered ready-made, we could only carry out these checks after installation. A number of necessary adjustments also emerged.”

