Interior of Starling tiny house showing white shiplap walls and U-shaped kitchen with dining booth

Canadian Tiny House Fits 3 Bedrooms in 33 Feet

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A Canadian company designed a 33-foot tiny house with three sleeping areas and a bathtub, proving small living doesn't mean sacrificing family space. The Starling offers creative solutions for growing families seeking simpler lives.

Growing families don't usually look at tiny houses and see a forever home, but the Starling might change that calculation.

Rewild Homes, a Canadian builder, created this 33-foot tiny house specifically for families who refuse to choose between small living and personal space. The home fits three separate sleeping areas, a full bathroom with a bathtub, and a flexible dining space that converts into extra sleeping quarters when needed.

The layout centers around an open dining booth near the entrance, with two bench seats hiding storage underneath and a table that becomes a bed. Since there's no separate living room, this spot serves as the family gathering place and can accommodate overnight guests.

The kitchen wraps around in a U-shape and includes a four-burner stove, oven, full-sized fridge and freezer, double sink, and breakfast bar. Pull-out storage in the cabinets squeezes function from every inch.

The main bedroom sits in a loft reached by storage-integrated stairs, with a handcrafted aluminum railing from Vancouver Island artist Wroughtenart. A second bedroom occupies the raised gooseneck section at the front, positioned on the opposite end from the main loft to give parents and kids meaningful separation.

Canadian Tiny House Fits 3 Bedrooms in 33 Feet

That second bedroom could work as a child's room, home office, or living space. The raised trailer design creates enough headroom to make it feel like a real room rather than a cramped afterthought.

The bathroom deserves special mention for including a bathtub and shower combo, which most tiny houses skip entirely. It also has a composting toilet and vanity sink, making it surprisingly functional for its size.

Why This Inspires

The Starling shows that small living doesn't have to mean giving up privacy or comfort. Families exploring alternatives to traditional housing often hit a wall when they have kids, but thoughtful design can create space where the floor plan says there isn't any.

The home balances portability with livability. At 33 feet on a triple-axle trailer, it's towable for families wanting mobility but substantial enough for permanent living. Based on similar models, the price likely sits around $110,000, far less than traditional homes in many Canadian markets.

More families are reconsidering what "enough space" actually means, and builders are responding with smarter layouts that work with real life instead of against it.

The Starling proves that home isn't measured in square footage but in how well the space serves the people living there.

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Based on reporting by New Atlas

This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.

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