Though seemingly not as remote as the house in the OP, this cabin in the Alaskan wilderness, hand built by one middle aged man all alone & using only hand powered tools (no electricity there) & with no assistance from anyone else, was home to a man named Richard "Dick" Proenneke for over 30 years.
For those of you who may not have heard of him, Dick Proenneke was a mechanic who, in 1968, decided in mid-life to move into the Alaskan wilderness to see how long he could last.
He began the project when he was in his mid to late 50's & lived there completely alone (occasionally going to the mainland to visit relatives) until he was in his 80's & could no longer do so.
The cabin is now a designated landmark & maintained by the state of Alaska.
And to make it all even more impressive... he brought a 16mm movie camera & tripod with him & filmed himself building the cabin!!! As a result, there was an utterly fascinating documentary made about him, entitled
Alone in the Wilderness, using mostly his own film. It shows him hewing & laying the logs, cutting the openings for the windows & door & laying in the stones for the fireplace & chimney, putting on the roof, etc. etc. He even hand cut the planks for the front door, lengthwise & perfectly straight, out of one log, then hand carved the wooden hinges. And of course, he hand carved all his tool handles, dishes & eating utensils.
One could literally use this film as an instructional tool for how to build a log cabin, it is that detailed.
Anyway, the basic story about him is here on Wikipedia, if anyone is interested...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Proenneke
...and here's a 10 minute segment of the documentary from YouTube
If you ever get the chance to see the entire thing, do so.
It's great!!
MrJim gives it two thumbs up!!!
