≡ Menu

Lincoln Tiny House at Mt. Hood Tiny House Village


This post contains affiliate links.

This is 261 square feet Lincoln tiny house on wheels at Mt. Hood tiny house village near Portland, Oregon.

It’s the Cypress 24 model that’s designed and built by Tumbleweed Houses and it’s now available for you to try out living tiny.

The outside features cedar plank siding with red trim. Inside, you’ll find a great room, kitchen, bathroom, downstairs bedroom, and large upstairs sleeping loft.

The Lincoln tiny home sleeps up to five people. Please enjoy, learn more, and re-share below. Thank you!

Lincoln Tiny House at Mt. Hood Tiny House Village

Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 001

Images © Tumbleweed Houses & Mt. Hood Village

Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 002 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 003 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 004 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 005 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 006 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 007 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 009 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 0010 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 0011 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 0012 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 0013 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 0014 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 0015 Mt Hood Tiny House Village 001 Mt Hood Tiny House Village 002 Mt Hood Tiny House Village 003 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 0016 Lincoln Tiny House at Mt Hood Tiny House Village via TinyHouseTalk-com 0017

Images © Tumbleweed Houses & Mt. Hood Village

Please learn more using the resources below. Thanks!

Resources

You can share this tiny house story with your friends and family for free using the e-mail and social media re-share buttons below. Thanks.

If you enjoyed this tiny house story you’ll absolutely LOVE our Free Daily Tiny House Newsletter with even more! Thank you!

More Like This: Explore our Tiny House Vacations Section

See The Latest: Go Back Home to See Our Latest Tiny Houses

This post contains affiliate links.

The following two tabs change content below.

Alex

Alex is a contributor and editor for TinyHouseTalk.com and the always free Tiny House Newsletter. He has a passion for exploring and sharing tiny homes (from yurts and RVs to tiny cabins and cottages) and inspiring simple living stories. We invite you to send in your story and tiny home photos too so we can re-share and inspire others towards a simple life too. Thank you!
{ 18 comments… add one }
  • Becky
    June 7, 2016, 6:51 pm

    Have you moved a home built with drywall? Everything cracks. That’s why most mobile homes that you see in parks have panels with built in wallpaper and trim over the seams. In tiny homes that will probably be moved more often, wood is much more flexible.

  • Rev
    June 8, 2016, 11:57 am

    Five stars!

    Boom! Sightlines open, front to rear!

    Yes! Counters on both sides of sink and range!

    Stairs with side rails to contain errant feet!

    Folks, this is nearing perfection. Not quite… it lacks a fireman pole for frisky discounts of bunk bed, but it is close.

    Definitely doable!

  • Rev
    June 8, 2016, 12:09 pm

    My comment should say “frisky disMounts from bunk bed”. Dern predictive text…

  • Susanne
    October 25, 2016, 8:10 pm

    Great community!!!!

    • Natalie
      October 26, 2016, 4:40 am

      Yes! I want to live there — Tiny House Talk Team

  • October 26, 2016, 8:02 am

    With sincere enthusiasm and emotional involverment, I feel to dedicate to this perfect combination of “Tiny House”, the magnificent and captivanting sound of “Nabucco” ” Va Pensiero su l’Ali Dorate” by Giuseppe Verdi. So with the hope that the thought of every man is the true and only treasure that we all possess…. Gabriella from Italy

    • Natalie
      October 27, 2016, 10:04 am

      🙂 — Tiny House Talk Team

  • Lori
    October 27, 2016, 2:36 pm

    I would only make a few changes to this floor plan. Eliminate the porch and extend the great room into it. Move the door to replace the 2nd window on the left (next to the stove). This gives you more options for furniture placement. You can always add a porch on later outside the door.
    Eliminate the window centered on the short bedroom wall downstairs, putting in a skinny closet that runs all the way across the width of the house. I use a twin size bed so still plenty of room in there. Upstairs would be guest room, library, maybe more storage, and crafting space.
    Pull out cutting boards everywhere you can in the kitchen for added counter space when needed, toe kick drawers too. Drop down table on the great room wall opposite the door that looks like a large framed picture when not in use. Seats made using padded and upholstered storage cubes that can separate for individual seating at the dining table or slid together for a window seat.

    • Natalie
      October 28, 2016, 7:53 am

      Great ideas! — Tiny House Talk Team

      • Lori
        October 28, 2016, 11:25 am

        Thanks! I’d build the house now but no place to park it legally–yet.

        I’d also add a two sided clear plexi wall with clear shelves (that opens on one side) to the loft for safety. Maybe also do the same for a stairs railing…for my cobalt & aqua bottle/jar collection. Sunlight coming through those bottles/jars from a skylight would cast those pretty colors all over the space. Since it opens on one side they’d still be useable but kept clean from dust.

        Also thought about a clear table top instead for the dropdown table and mounting it in front of that window across from the now-on-the-side door. Hinges would attach to the windowsill. Instead of artwork it would blend in as the window, acting kind of like a storm window inside but still letting the light in. To open the window you’d have to drop down the table though to access it.

  • ZACHARY MOHRMANN
    October 27, 2016, 7:01 pm

    Very nice , but I think i would have gone with a “L” shaped counter top, Making the great room larger…..

    • Natalie
      October 28, 2016, 7:53 am

      Good idea! — Tiny House Talk Team

  • Large Marge
    November 2, 2016, 1:23 am

    Everybody, please note the stair.

    The stair includes a very important feature. Do you see the dual diagonal 2x10s, one against the wall, the other supporting the outside of each step (tread and riser). These are called ‘stringers’.

    Here is the essential part:
    The outside stringer acts as a ‘stop’ to contain the foot, preventing a sideways slide off the step. Thumbs up!

    Add a handrail (either on the wall, or a banister) and a powered exhaust fan over the cooking area, and this is a winner.

    The photographer did a nice staging of exterior shots. We appreciate the owners for investing the energy in making this appear like you are a business, you are in business, and you mean business.

    • Natalie
      November 2, 2016, 7:38 am

      🙂 — Tiny House Talk Team

  • Nancy
    November 2, 2016, 6:42 pm

    Now this is pretty darn perfect!! LOVE!!! Thank you for sharing it with us!!

    • Natalie
      November 3, 2016, 9:47 am

      Our pleasure 🙂 — Tiny House Talk Team

  • gabriella
    March 3, 2017, 3:13 pm

    This is the classic icon as stars in The Heart.

  • ROSEE
    March 5, 2017, 8:40 am

    BEAUTIFUL!

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.