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The peach-colored home at 31 Romain St. in San Francisco looks more than quaint.
Source: Redfin
It sits in the city's Eureka Valley neighborhood, where the median real estate value is $1.59 million.
Source: Redfin
That's just slightly above San Francisco's overall median real estate value of $1,378,000.
Source: Zillow
The home is also what's known as an "earthquake cottage," or shack.
In 1906, an earthquake and a series of fires leveled 500 city blocks in San Francisco and left about 250,000 people homeless.
Source: Business Insider
One of the city's temporary housing solutions was building 5,000 wooden cottages at designated camps for displaced residents. Each cottage cost $50 to build, which tenants paid $2 a month toward.
Source: Business Insider and National Park Service
Over 16,000 people found refuge in them.
Source: Business Insider
Eventually, the homes were moved from the camps and are now scattered throughout the city.
Source: National Park Service
They blend into residential streets fairly seamlessly.
Source: National Park Service
And as chance would have it, another of the tiny cottages sits next to the home at 31 Romain St.
Rose said both of them, including the earthquake cottage at 31 Romain St., are completely renovated.
All that remains of what was once a makeshift disaster shelter is the home's facade.
You'd never think you're stepping into a century-old tiny home upon entering the foyer.
In 2015, the home's owner nearly tripled the size of the home, expanding the original 800-square-foot shack into a 2,155-square-foot modern abode with city permits.
He had the ceilings raised, skylights installed, an open-concept floor plan established, and modern appliances brought in.
Three bedrooms and three bathrooms are found in the home.
And most notably, he had a new foundation laid in 2015, which Rose said is a huge selling point in an earthquake-prone place like San Francisco.
"It was pretty much an entire new home besides the fact that the exterior was kept in the front up to how it was supposed to look originally," Rose said.
Typically, the city's remaining earthquake shacks sell in the $1 million range, with the most expensive on record selling for $1.4 million in 2016.
Source: Business Insider
The owner himself shelled out only $820,000 for the home in 2013.
Source: Redfin