Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Inhabitat is an English-language green design and lifestyle media site with the tagline “Design For a Better World.” Founded in 2005, the site states that it was created by designer Jill Fehrenbacher and is now owned by MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. It is not an e-commerce site or a design tool, but rather a vertical information platform focused on environmental news, sustainable design, green architecture, and low-carbon lifestyles.
The site has highly detailed categories, with main sections including News, Design, Lifestyle, and Environment. Its content covers agriculture, animal protection, clean energy, climate change, pollution, transportation, architecture, furniture, interior design, smart homes, Tiny Homes, DIY, food, gardening, health, pets, and sustainable travel. One example from the crawled pages is an article about PDF architectural plans for the small modern Micropolis House, showing that its main content formats are project coverage, design case studies, trend analysis, and eco-friendly lifestyle guides.
There does not currently appear to be a paywall or membership pricing for reading; regular content can be browsed for free. The site offers an email newsletter subscription and has an Advertising entry, so its business model is most likely based on ads, brand partnerships, and traffic monetization. The price of the house design PDF mentioned in the article belongs to the product being reported on, not to Inhabitat’s own services.
Its strengths are a clear positioning and a long-term focus on sustainable design, making it useful for quickly discovering inspiration related to green buildings, eco-friendly products, and low-carbon living. Its categories are broad and connect design aesthetics with environmental issues. Downsides include frequent pop-ups, subscription prompts, and repeated navigation elements, which can disrupt the reading experience. Since the content is primarily media reporting, users who need rigorous engineering parameters, building codes, or academic-level data will still need to consult original sources. The English-language content may also present a barrier for Chinese readers.
It is suitable for architects, interior designers, product designers, environmental industry professionals, sustainable living bloggers, design and architecture students, and general readers interested in tiny houses, zero-waste living, renewable energy, and eco-friendly homes. It is less suitable for users who need to directly purchase services, download professional databases, or manage projects.
Based on its domain and content type, it is a standard English-language information media site, and there is no indication that Google/Facebook login is required for reading. It is generally likely to be directly accessible from mainland China. However, external social logins, ad scripts, or some embedded resources may not load completely.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on inhabitat.com official site.
inhabitat.com is an United States News provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach inhabitat.com directly.