How many times have JW depictions of paradise shown cozy little gabled, shingled, lapsided, wood frame houses tastefully situated in front of mountain lakes without a hint of technology? I've lost count.
I've always thought this picture betrays an unbelievable naivete about how technology works. We all know it takes tools to build almost any kind of house. Even if we make things as simple as possible and only use handtools, (Which is time-consuming but certainly possible) they don't just grow on trees. They have to be made.
There is no escaping this simple fact. It takes tools to make tools.
The tools needed even to make simple handtools like hammers, saws, planes, bracebits and axes don't grow on trees either. Lathes, presses, milling machines, hammer forges, blast and smelting furnaces also have to be made. And the components of these tools come from many different industries. --Precision bearings, electrical controls, hydraulics, pneumatics, gauges and instruments of all types.This in turn requires even more specialized tooling.
The truth is, almost any manufactured product you lay your eyes on is really "sitting" on top of a very large pyramid or other technologies. And it is this huge network of technologies along with the infrastructure to support them (e.g. railroads, mines, power plants etc.) that in large part "makes" the world we live in the very thing that JW's seem to detest ---An industrialized society were the vast majority live in cities and work for others.
A JW reading this may object that I've overcomplicated things by injecting too much technology into the picture and that's true to an extent. Metallurgy, for example was an established technology long before we had electrical power. However this makes the problem worse not better. You can take technology out of the picture, but the more you remove, the more back-breaking human physical labor it takes to replace it. --Labor to mine iron ore, labor to mine coal, labor to stoke coal fired furnaces, and steam engines, labor to cut trees by hand, etc.
Any way you look at it, without an industrialized society, you don't have cozy little gabled, shingled, lapsided, wood frame houses. You don't nice brick houses either. You don't even have log cabins. How about a mud hut with a thatched roof?