Living In Panama House - Under Construction Now

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It is very exciting.

We are building our newest model of the Living In Panama House.

The 1-bedroom version.

And, it is going up very quickly.

This one is going to be our display house.  Which we, and perhaps interested buyers, can use for the weekend or longer.

Why the 1-Bedroom Model

If you have explored our Living in Panama House, you will know that we were only offering 1300 sq. feet 2 and 3-bedroom homes.

However, we have had a number of inquiries from people who would like a smaller version of our Living in Panama House. They say they don't need much room and they want to simplify their lives.

So we decided to offer a smaller, 1000 sq. foot, 1-bedroom model.  This smaller model can also be configured as a 2 bedroom home.

Of course, we have also had a few people asking if we can build a 3000 sq. foot model, but far fewer than the smaller house contingent.


Find out more about the Living In Panama House here


We invite you to come and watch the house while it is under construction.

Come back and see it when it is done too.

We want to give you a chance to walk around in the spaces and experience the Living In Panama House yourself.  This will help you decide not only if a Living in Panama House is right for you, but what size and configuration is the best fit.

We hope that you can come to visit us in Puerto Armuelles soon and check out the Living in Panama House for yourself.

The Video

In the video above, you can see the initial stages of the Living in Panama House under construction. You also catch glimpses of our beautiful Corazon de Oro property where the house is located.

Video Transcript

Enjoy this speeded version of our first Living In Panama House being built.

Our Living in Panama House was designed for the tropics and for you to customize. We build the superstructure for you.  That is - roof, walls, electrical, water, and the like and you put in the finishes - or have a recommended contractor do it for you.

This 1 bedroom model is being built on our beautiful Corazon de Oro property in the charming beach town of Puerto Armuelles. The info card in the upper right is a link to a video showing more of these gorgeous beach properties.

We just started this house and it is going up very quickly. I will create another video when it is fully constructed.

For more information on the Living in Panama House, Corazon de Oro properties, or the charming beach town of Puerto Armuelles, go to our site LivinginPanama.com. Explore the information there, or contact us directly.   

Puerto Armuelles is not a tourist destination, per se. There isn't much nightlife.

It is a wonderful place just to be.

Thanks for watching.


You can find out more about Puerto Armuelles by starting here.

To see all our properties, visit our Panama Real Estate page.

Please comment below.

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This is my video using my new drone!  A DJI Phantom 3 Pro.  

It is very fun to fly.

The hardest part is using the new-to-me software needed to edit the footage.  (At least it is necessary when you take experienced photographers advice and you shoot in dlog. That makes everything "flat", requiring more intensive post-editing!) I attempted to use Adobe Premier Pro.  Please let me know how you think it turned out.

I will be taking more and better drone footage. Hopefully soon.

It is the rainy season so I cannot do it just anytime. I need to wait for blue skies in the morning. The afternoons are abit too breezy for my skill level.

The Property

Corazon de Oro is really beautiful.  Which is one reason we are building our first Living In Panama House there.

The end of the video above, includes footage from Friday, July 28, of the house under construction.

If you are searching for a wonderful place to live on the beach, you should check out our Corazon de Oro properties.

Find out more about the beautiful Corazon de Oro here.

Video Transcript - & Links 

This beautiful beach property (seen in the video above) is for sale in Puerto Armuelles, Panama.

It is just one of the 20 beautiful properties we have here at Corazon de Oro.

Stay to the end of the video, to see one of our Living In Panama houses in the process of being built.

 


This property leads right down to a beautiful beach. It is the rainy season so, driftwood has accumulated for the time being.

It is only a half-hour beach walk to town, or 5 minutes by car.  Check out the video I made of walking on this beach, into town.

This is truly a beautiful place just to be.

The prices for these 20 lots range from under $100 thousand for beachfront, to as low as $32 thousand. You can find out more about these 20 lots by clicking  (the link below).

This beachfront lot is 54 feet wide and 140 feet deep.


As you have probably heard, Puerto Armuelles is the charming beach town in the Chiriqui Province that Chiquita Banana built back in the 1920s.  It a unique town in Panama.

This short video shows off one of our beautiful beachfront properties.  

It also gives a brief tour of some of the places you can easily visit when you live in Puerto Armuelles. 

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Links

You can find more photos and details about this property by clicking here.

In the video, I mention a few links you may want to click.  Here they are:

Transcript of Video

Hi, this is Betsy of Living in Panama.


About the Property

We have a wonderful beachfront lot for sale in the charming beach town of Puerto Armuelles



This property has everything going for it:

  • Affordable
  • Flat
  • Level
  • Easy access
  • All utilities available
  • On a beautiful beach.

Also For Sale

The 2 adjacent properties you see are also for sale, -- which includes the yellow beachfront house we are currently remodelling. To find out more, click the link below

As I said, this property is in Puerto Armuelles, in the Chiriqui province.

Here we are getting closer; to get a Google Earth view of the property.

Price

It is only $54,500 dollars.



Near Services 

This beachfront property is in a great location. Just a block and a half from the Tsunami Inn which hosts a horseshoe game and expat hang out event every Sunday afternoon.

Even closer, in the other direction, are 2 restaurants. Las Juanas which is a seafood restaurant with outdoor seating right on the beach. It is really a great place to hang out.

Next to it is  Big Daddy's Hotel, which has a restaurant inside, with air-conditioning. 

There are a couple of small grocery stores within a block or two of the property. Puerto also has a great Romero grocery store as well as others about 5 minutes away.

Nearby Things To Do

This property and Puerto Armuelles, in general, can take advantage of all that Chiriqui Province offers.

It is only an hour day trip down to visit Mono Feliz and maybe feed the monkeys.

You can take a swim in front of your property in the morning and then go take a hike in Volcan or Boquete or Cerro Punta and be back at your beachfront home after a leisurely day.

David is about an hour and 15 minutes away. Its the biggest town in Chiriqui, Puerto Armuelles is the 2nd biggest, but David is definitely the shopping mecca. You can get pretty much you’d ever want there. And it keeps growing in that way. (e.g., a huge expansion of the Chiriqui Mall in David is currently underway)

And even outside of the Chiriqui province you can go along up this way to Almirante and take the ferry to Bocas del Toro for maybe a long weekend.

Or you can go right over here and visit Costa Rica.

About Puerto Armuelles

Or you could simply hang out in Puerto Armuelles.


Chiquita banana built Puerto Armuelles from scratch starting in the late 1920s. They put a unique stamp on this charming beach town. Including building whole neighborhoods of wooden houses on stilts.



Today Puerto is a charming beach town.


In fact, it is the only true beach town in Panama.



It has pretty much everything you need to live comfortably, including a great beach life, whether for you that is walking on the beach, boogie boarding, stand up paddleboarding, or surfing, or going there to buy fish from the fishermen.

More Info

For more information on this property, please contact us at our site, LivinginPanama.com or click the link below.

Please give us a thumbs up if you enjoyed this video and don’t forget to subscribe (YouTube).


You can explore more properties in Puerto Armuelles here.  

And you can learn more about our charming beach town starting here

image of hand holding tiny house on purple background
Tiny or small homes are great option for 2nd home, vacation home, or rentals

The notion of living in a “Tiny” home or basic shelter has been around for centuries.

Ascetic monks from the 15th century and earlier have written about the spiritual benefits of casting off the extraneous luxuries of society and getting back to the bare necessities of life.

The ascetics felt that only without encumbrances and distractions is man truly able to achieve spiritual grounding. Only by practicing simple daily rituals can one enjoy a meaningful life.

Henry David Thoreau got back to basics at Walden Pond in Massachusetts in the 19th century and wrote extensively about the beauty and spirituality that filled his days.  Thoreau was quite outspoken in his criticism of common “city dwellers” who were distracted by too much of everything.  Of course, Thoreau who lived in the 1800s had no way to imagine the distractions that man would face by 2016. My wife Betsy is quick to point out that Thoreau was a frequent visitor of his mother’s home around mealtime, and that he sent his laundry out to be washed.   (I guess it’s tough to be a perfect ascetic).

The early 19th century Irish Poet and academic William Butler Yeats spent many hours “living alone in a Bee loud Glade” in a tiny cottage on the Lake Isle of Innisfree in County Sligo. Many of his poems are situated at this, or other “sacred” natural places. Yet, he also taught writing at University in Sligo, and had a very complex life as a university administrator, husband, father, and community member. For Yeats, a simple thatch hut was a respite from the stresses of day to day living.

The current revival of the small, or “tiny” houses can be attributed in large part to the vast popularity of architect/writer Susan Susanka’s 1998 book “the Not-so-Big-House”.   In her book, Susanka asks the basic question of “why does it need to be so big?”

After all, the average size of the North American family has been shrinking since World War II. Yet our houses have been steadily growing. In 1950, the average US home was 1000 square feet. In 1960, it had grown to 1200 square feet. By 1990 it was 2000 square feet. In 2016 the average new home built in the US was just over 2,400 square feet. The only nation in the world with larger homes is Australia where the average sized home built in 2016 was 2,500 square feet.

How did we evolve from a family of four in the 1960’s that fit into a 1200 square foot home, to a family of 2.5 that requires twice as much room? Are we happier now that we have all this room?

Most studies show that the overwhelming reason for the “super-sizing” of North American home has mostly to do with our ability to afford it. Simply put, North Americans have a lot more money than we had back in 1960. In a market driven society, all that money needs to be spent on something. Why not buy a bigger house?

 

The modern day iteration of the truly “tiny” house evolved from this rethinking of house size that followed on the heels of Susan Susanka’s best selling book.  In fact, these days we even try to define what the limits are for each category of small house.

  • Tiny house =  80 and 400 square feet
  • Small houses = 400-1000 square feet.

Experience with Tiny Houses

As I mentioned in a previous article, I have lived in a shipping container in Alaska for 2 summers. At 8’x40’ the 320 square foot container was the perfect “tiny man cave” for warming up and sleeping after a long, long day of commercial fishing. However, I would not consider this amount of space (especially the 8’ ceiling height which felt really low) to be a space that I would have appreciated in any other context.

Even my 262 square foot studio apartment in Seattle’s University District where I lived during graduate school, was much a more pleasant space.

This apartment had been carved out of the second floor hallway and a corner room of a hundred year old craftsman house. It had huge windows, and nearly 10’ ceilings. It was much smaller, but it was a perfect city apartment for a busy student on a budget.   An added bonus was that my landlord really didn’t care what I did to my unit, as long as I asked first. So, I cut an interior opening between the kitchen and the bedroom to get a view and some daylight into the kitchen/desk alcove. I also installed a new shower and tiled the bathroom.

Rising Interest In Tiny Homes

With the insane rise in home prices in Seattle, and other similar cities, many people, especially the young and retirees on a budget are revisiting the Tiny home concept in order to continue living in the cities which they have come to love and appreciate. Not everyone has an extra $2000 to be able to rent a studio apartment. Many do not want to move out to the suburbs and spend their day commuting to and from the city.

There is a loophole in the maximum housing density law in Seattle which allows Tiny homes to be located on residential property, provided that the home is equipped with functional tires and a trailer hitch. In other words, these “homes” must fit on the roadway and be moved from the property from time to time (I am not sure how often).  In other words, the Tiny homes allowed in Seattle are really more like wood framed trailers. As such, the sizes are quite standardized, in order to conform with the building codes as well as the transportation codes. Being so standardized is, from a design standpoint, pretty boring. Most Tiny Homes tend to look alike, sort of “cookie cutter” versions of one another, just with different window treatments, siding materials, and of course, interior finishes.   However, the good news about this standardization of size and form is that these tiny houses can be factory built and delivered to your home site pretty much anywhere in the US.

Tiny Homes as Vacation or Rental House

We have had a few inquiries in recent months from folks who already live in Boquete, or in other highland areas of Chiriqui who are curious about what it would take for them to park a trailer, or mobile home on an affordable lot on or near the beach, to use for long weekends, so that they could get their “beach fix” without the having to stay in a hotel.

To my mind, the tiny house concept might be the perfect solution for those who just want a semi-permanent “camp” at the beach that is always waiting for them. I have not priced shipping containers lately, but I think that a shipping container base/secure storage locker could be used as the construction locker/storage unit for beach chairs, bar-b-q, surf boards, etc…so that there would be no risk of break-in in the event that one didn’t have anyone watching the property.

The tiny house, as a short-term accommodation is also a natural rental unit. Many short-term guests to the beach don’t have much luggage, no possessions, and they don’t need much space. Rentals in Puerto are still tough to find. As such, rental rates in Puerto are high. I think it is just a matter of time before some enterprising builder begins to produce tiny homes as rental houses.   We have had a couple of calls from guys who have experience building pre-fab homes and tiny homes, already. It is not out of the question that we, ourselves, may build a tiny home or two on one of our properties, so that our clients will have a pleasant place to live while they explore Puerto Armuelles.

Our Ideal Tiny Home Is Bigger

After all our recent researches of tiny homes, Betsy and I are drawing the same conclusion that many others have arrived at before us. That is, Tiny Homes could be just the ticket as a weekend retreat, or a short-term rental.   Tiny Homes seem like an amazing business opportunity.

However, when I consider designing a retirement home for my wife Betsy and myself, a small house feels better than a tiny one.  I know that I would breathe a little freer in a slightly bigger space than the sub-400 square foot size which defines the truly “tiny” house.

If I had to throw out a number, my own personal ideal size dwelling for a single person would probably fall in the 600-800 square foot range. For a couple, I would think 800-1200 square feet would do well. This allows room for one to be alone for awhile to study, meditate, or practice a musical instrument, without disturbing one’s partner.

Living In Panama House

The Living in Panama House is probably not the final and “perfect” solution to the idea of living a big lifestyle in a small house in the tropics.  However, it is the best that I have been able to come up with so far.  Believe me, I have given this a lot of thought. I consider the Living in Panama House to represent an honest attempt at a “Not So Big Tropical House”.

As we have been refining the Living in Panama House design, our model has grown a bit, and shrunk a bit. But we keep coming back to about 500 square feet of finished, potentially air conditioned space. This “module which contains the two bedrooms, bath, and a small hallway, is all housed within the “umbrella” of a big sheltering roof. The three-bedroom model is about 650 square feet enclosed.   The total square footage of the first model home (two or three bedrooms) is approximately 1,500 square feet.

The Living in Panama house is a bit bigger than my ideal house size for North America, because we think that it is beneficial to have a bit more covered space in the tropics to allow one to enjoy an open, breezy feeling, since it can get hot here. Also, we have more “hang out” time in Puerto Armuelles than we have in Seattle where one just doesn’t have much time to enjoy being at home. So, we end up using our house more here. Betsy and I will undoubtedly adjust the size of the Living in Panama House up or down over time, depending upon feedback we get from clients.

Tiny Home Builders Wanted

If you have any interest in building tiny homes in Puerto Armuelles, we would be happy to help you get started. Drop us a line.  There is certainly room for competition in our untapped housing market.

Jan 1, 2017

yellow image with text about cost of building a house in Panama
How much it cost to build a house, depends alot on you. What kind of house do you want?

I get asked that question all the time.  Or more specifically,

“How much does it cost/square foot to build a house in Puerto Armuelles?”

I always feel reluctant.  I want to give a definitive answer, but it is complicated.

"What will it cost to build", is a hard question to answer anywhere, not just in Panama.

The answer depends upon what kind, size, and quality of house you are building.

Basic vs Fancy House Costs

If you build a fancy house, with lots of expensive materials (expensive windows, doors, custom fixtures, etc.) it will cost a lot more than a very basic house. It won’t cost just 10%, or 20% more. Building a fancy house can cost 2 to 10 times more than a very basic house.

In Seattle, circa 2016, building a basic house costs about $200 per square foot. A house with expensive finishes can cost $250 to $500 per square foot (I am not kidding). And it goes up from there. An architect-designed, custom timber-framed, Japanese tea house or fancy outdoor sauna building on the lake could cost over $1000 per square foot

Cost of Building in Puerto Armuelles

In Puerto Armuelles the answer is the same: it depends upon what kind of house you are building.

Fancy Houses

On the high end, there are wealthy expats who have had homes built on the beach by local contractors.  They can easily spend $100/sq ft and more.  This does not include the cost of the land.

More Basic Houses

On the other hand, in Puerto Armuelles we have several expats who have been their own contractor and have also done a lot of the work themselves. These folks have completed their projects for under $35/sq ft. Granted some of these homes lack much of a design concept since the owner-builders had not built before. However, the owner/builders appear quite pleased with the results.

Cost of Construction - Chiriquí Province

I have done a brief survey of costs recently. I took into account my conversations with builders and owners. (As I drive around the Chiriquí province, I often stop by construction sites to chat.) I have also done the usual online research that is available to all of us. Based on these sources, I have concluded the cost figures below.

Cost per Sq. Ft Range

  • A Panamanian built 1500 square foot, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath home in the usual Panamanian style costs between $70,000 and $85,000 or $50-$56 per square foot.
  • An article by Inside Panama that I recently read, puts the cost per square foot for typical construction in Panama at $80-$90 per square foot.
  • In Boquete, CMRW Construction’s Carlos Rivera gives a quote of $70-$90 per square foot for “average” construction.
  • Manzar Lari, at Casa de Montana construction, has a broader range of $70-$120 per square foot.

Cost Depends Upon The Finishes

As I read the descriptions of the different grades or qualities of construction available at the various price points, one thing is quite familiar.  Just as in the US, the big difference in the cost of construction is in the finishes.

Finishes include:

  • Roofing
  • Tile
  • Appliances
  • Plumbing fixtures
  • Windows
  • Doors,
  • Countertops

The finishes vary greatly in price.  The cost per square foot for the structure of the house does not vary nearly as much as it does for the finishes.

Living In Panama House

People understandably want to know how much it will cost to build a house in Panama.

The Living In Panama House has the advantage of being designed by an architect specifically for Panama's tropical climate.

The Living in Panama house is an entire “rethink” of the concept of “home” in the tropics. The Living In Panama house is mostly an open-air living concept. This open-air structure, with just a portion totally enclosed, means that only a small section of the house requires the full complement of finishes. With this type of design, you eliminate the need to pay for extra windows, doors, air conditioners, insulation, or cabinetry. Not that you don’t have those finishes, but fewer of them are needed.

Because of this savings, the Living in Panama House, can be built, including finishes, for between $56 and $80 per square foot. This is a huge saving.

The structure of the house, without finishes, costs an estimate of $30 per square foot for the 2 bedroom model and an estimate of $38 per square foot for the 3 bedroom model.

Conclusion

The cost of building anywhere in Panama varies.  The biggest variable is your choice of finishes.

Summary of cost/square foot (including finishes)

  • Basic DIY type - $35 -$45
  • Basic Panamanian style  - $50-$56
  • Living In Panama house - $56-$80
  • Average Western-style - $70-$120

I hope this helps to answer this popular question.

Related House Construction Info

We have written about remodeling, various construction materials, and alternative housing types. Click on any of the links below to read an article.

Please share your experiences with the cost of building a house in Panama.  Use the comment section below.  Thank you.