
Extra-Wide Tiny House Fits Full Bath and Yoga Space
A 30-foot tiny house proves that 1.5 extra feet of width can transform cramped quarters into a spacious home complete with a clawfoot tub and room for morning yoga. The Huckleberry shows how smart design creates apartment-style comfort on wheels.
Forget squeezing into loft bedrooms and skipping showers for compact living. The Huckleberry tiny house by Rewild Homes proves that just 1.5 extra feet of width can turn a mobile home into a surprisingly spacious retreat.
At 30 feet long and 10 feet wide, the home stretches beyond the standard 8.5-foot width most tiny houses stick to for easy towing. That extra space makes all the difference, creating an apartment-like floor plan instead of the typical hallway-with-rooms feeling.
The owner prioritized yoga practice and relaxation over elaborate cooking, so designer Rewild Homes delivered exactly that. The living room features an open floor plan with a large bench seat and plenty of space for downward dogs and sun salutations.
The kitchen stays simple with a portable induction cooktop, granite sink, and fridge, plus a vintage wood-burning stove with a built-in bread oven tucked between the living and kitchen areas. A breakfast bar offers seating for two beneath custom cabinetry finished with cedar shakes that echo the rustic exterior.

But the real luxury hides behind a sliding barn door. The bathroom includes a full-size cast iron clawfoot tub, a stacked washer and dryer, and even slate flooring with underfloor heating. These features rarely appear in tiny homes, where corner showers and composting toilets are the norm.
The single-floor layout means the bedroom boasts full headroom with space to stand upright. A double bed fits comfortably alongside extensive built-in storage, eliminating the cramped loft bedrooms that force many tiny house dwellers to crawl into bed.
Natural light floods every room through oversized windows, decorative diamond-shaped panes, and multiple skylights. Inside, hardwood floors meet natural pine walls, cedar trim, and fir beams for a warm, rustic feel that matches the wood and metal exterior.
The Bright Side
The Huckleberry costs around $115,000 based on comparable models and requires a permit for road travel due to its width. But for people seeking mobile living without sacrificing comfort, those tradeoffs deliver a home that feels genuinely livable rather than purely minimalist.
The design shows that downsizing doesn't have to mean doing without the spaces and features that make a house feel like home.
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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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