This wood home-on-a-rock in Nicaragua is a great example of leaving just enough space around the core to walk the natural edges of the island without letting any other part of the property go unbuilt as the photos above illustrate.
Along the St. Lawrence River at the border of the United States and Canada there are many luxury estates and private castles but some of the most impressive buildings are the little residences people have set down on everything tree-covered islands to tiny rocks barely sitting above the surface of the water.
In other locations people have made entire villas from the limited land available to build on, such as the 23-room island home in Rhode Island (in the image above) or the modern four-story residence on Lake Michigan (pictured below – images via BusyBoo and TinyHouseBlog).
Of course, not all buildings on tiny islands are homes – there are luxury resorts and even churches designed to work on the smallest building footprint possible, and then there are lighthouses which can be wonderful but dangerous places during storms as the incredible image