Modern steel and wood tiny house on wheels with optional outdoor deck

Upside-Down Tiny Home Fits 3 Bedrooms in 32 Feet

🤯 Mind Blown

An Australian tiny home company just flipped the script on small space living by putting bedrooms downstairs and the living area up top. The clever design creates a spacious interior that feels more like an apartment than a cramped mobile home.

Forget everything you know about tiny house layouts. An Australian builder just proved that thinking upside down can solve one of the biggest challenges in compact living: fitting full family space into a home on wheels.

Removed Tiny Homes recently unveiled the Onda, a 32-foot tiny house that completely reverses traditional design. Instead of cramming sleeping lofts under low ceilings while wasting vertical space below, this home puts three full bedrooms on the ground floor and elevates the kitchen, living room, and main bathroom upstairs.

The layout might sound backwards, but it works beautifully. The bedrooms have lower ceilings to maximize space, connected by a full-height hallway that makes moving between rooms comfortable. Two bedrooms share an open area separated by dividing walls, while a third private bedroom sits behind a door for extra privacy.

A small downstairs bathroom with toilet and sink serves the bedroom level. Then stairs lead up to where most tiny houses put their sleeping lofts: a surprisingly spacious living area with full standing height, natural light from skylights, and an L-shaped sofa with built-in storage.

Upside-Down Tiny Home Fits 3 Bedrooms in 32 Feet

The upstairs kitchen comes fully equipped with everything from a dishwasher to a propane cooktop. The main bathroom includes a glass-enclosed shower, vanity, and even a stacked washer and dryer. At 11 feet wide instead of the typical 8.5 feet, the Onda feels genuinely roomy.

The home sits on a double-axle trailer with steel siding and wooden accents. An optional deck can extend the living space outdoors, perfect for Australia's climate.

Why This Inspires

The Onda represents a fresh approach to a growing challenge: how to live affordably without sacrificing comfort or family space. As housing costs soar globally, innovative designs like this prove smaller doesn't have to mean cramped or compromise.

The price starts at about $165,000 USD, positioning it as an alternative to traditional mortgages while providing genuine space for families or remote workers needing dedicated rooms. It's available throughout Australia, where the tiny house movement continues gaining momentum among people seeking financial freedom and simpler living.

Sometimes the best solutions come from turning conventional wisdom on its head. The Onda shows that with creativity and smart design, small spaces can offer big possibilities for comfortable, affordable living.

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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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