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The Ochoco: An Extra-Wide 10-Foot Tiny House with a Peninsula Kitchen by Spindrift Homes

The Ochoco is the extra-wide flagship from Spindrift Homes in Bend, Oregon, and it solves the one thing that makes most tiny houses feel tight: width. While nearly every tiny house on wheels is capped at the road-legal 8.5 feet, the Ochoco stretches to a full 10 feet, and those extra inches change everything. Built on a triple-axle trailer at 30 feet long, it is essentially a wider, upgraded take on the Sonoma, dressed in a crisp modern-farmhouse palette of white and black with a true peninsula kitchen. It is offered fully furnished for $140,000. Here is the full tour.

The Ochoco tiny house by Spindrift Homes with white board-and-batten siding and a black metal roof on a triple-axle trailer

Images courtesy of Spindrift Homes


Extra Width Changes Everything

Those eighteen extra inches do not sound like much until you step inside. The Ochoco’s 10-foot width gives it room for a genuine peninsula with bar seating, a full sofa, and clear walking paths on either side, the kind of layout that simply does not fit in a standard build. A vaulted white shiplap ceiling, a black ceiling fan, recessed lighting, and a skylight keep the whole interior bright and open, while light vinyl-plank floors and black accents lean into the modern-farmhouse look.

The Ochoco interior showing the open-tread staircase, peninsula kitchen with bar stools, and a loft above

Images courtesy of Spindrift Homes

A True Peninsula Kitchen

The kitchen is the headline upgrade. A butcher block peninsula juts into the room with seating for two, doubling as prep space, breakfast bar, and a natural divider between the kitchen and living room. Along the wall, white shaker cabinets with gold hardware pair with a black gas range and oven, a deep porcelain farmhouse sink, and a black Classic refrigerator, all set against white subway tile with dark grout and open reclaimed-wood shelving.

The Ochoco peninsula kitchen with butcher block counters, white cabinets, a black range, farmhouse sink, and subway tile

Images courtesy of Spindrift Homes

The Ochoco kitchen peninsula with two bar stools and butcher block counter dividing the kitchen and living room

Images courtesy of Spindrift Homes

Overhead view of the Ochoco kitchen showing the gas range, farmhouse sink, and wraparound butcher block counters

Images courtesy of Spindrift Homes

A Storage Staircase to the Loft

An open-tread staircase with a black handrail leads up to the bedroom loft, and the structure beneath it is packed with built-in cubbies and closed cabinets, so the climb up doubles as a wall of storage. The open risers keep the stairs from feeling heavy, letting light pass through and preserving the airy feel of the main floor.

The Ochoco open-tread storage staircase with built-in cubbies leading to the loft, with the bathroom beyond

Images courtesy of Spindrift Homes

The Living Room

The living area takes full advantage of the extra width with a proper gray sectional sofa that converts to a bed for guests. A butcher block table folds down from the wall for dining or working, then tucks flat when it is not needed, and an electric fireplace adds warmth and a cozy focal point. Wraparound windows wrap the space in light and frame the high-desert views outside.

The Ochoco living room with a gray sleeper sectional, a fold-down butcher block table, and an electric fireplace

Images courtesy of Spindrift Homes

The Loft Bedroom

The single bedroom is a loft reached by the storage staircase, and thanks to the home’s extra width it feels far more like a real bedroom than a crawl-in cubby. A double bed sits under the vaulted ceiling with a skylight overhead, sliding glass and picture windows on either side, wall sconces for reading, and a bit of built-in storage.

The Ochoco loft bedroom with a double bed, skylight, sliding glass door, and large windows

Images courtesy of Spindrift Homes

The Bathroom

The bathroom carries the same modern-farmhouse finishes, with a floating white vanity, a vessel sink, a black faucet, a subway tile backsplash, and a backlit mirror, plus floating shelves for towels. In place of a composting toilet, the Ochoco steps up to an incinerating toilet, a premium, water-free option for off-grid living.

The Ochoco bathroom with a floating white vanity, vessel sink, backlit mirror, and subway tile

Images courtesy of Spindrift Homes

The shower is generously tiled in white subway tile with dark grout, topped by a rainfall shower head and fitted with a fold-down teak bench, a genuinely comfortable, full-size shower.

The Ochoco shower with white subway tile, a rainfall shower head, and a fold-down teak bench

Images courtesy of Spindrift Homes

Design Details

  • Builder: Spindrift Homes, Bend, Oregon
  • Dimensions: 30′ long x 10′ wide (extra-wide), on a triple-axle trailer
  • Price: $140,000, sold fully furnished
  • Style: modern farmhouse in white and black, an extra-wide upgrade of the Sonoma
  • Kitchen: butcher block peninsula with bar seating, white shaker cabinets with gold hardware, black gas range and oven, porcelain farmhouse sink, black Classic refrigerator, subway tile, open shelving, dedicated washer-dryer space
  • Living: gray sleeper sectional, fold-down butcher block table, electric fireplace
  • Loft: double bed reached by an open-tread storage staircase, skylight, sliding glass and picture windows, sconces
  • Bathroom: subway-tiled shower with rainfall head and fold-down teak bench, floating vanity with vessel sink and backlit mirror, incinerating toilet
  • Systems: mini-split AC and heat, on-demand water heater, Bluetooth surround sound

What Makes the Ochoco Special

  • The extra 18 inches. A 10-foot width turns a clever, compact layout into one that genuinely feels like a small house.
  • A real peninsula kitchen. Bar seating, wraparound counters, and a true work triangle are rare at this size.
  • Guest-ready living. A sleeper sectional plus a fold-down table means you can host without a dedicated guest room.
  • Premium, off-grid touches. An incinerating toilet, on-demand hot water, and an electric fireplace push it toward full-time, full-comfort living.
  • Sustainable and custom. Like every Spindrift build, it uses nontoxic, largely reclaimed materials, plants 104 trees per home, and can be tailored to your finishes and layout.

Learn More

See more of the Ochoco or start your own custom build at spindrifthomes.com, or follow along on Instagram @spindrift_tinyhomes.

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Alex

Alex Pino is the founder of Tiny House Talk, a leading resource on tiny homes and simple living since 2009. He helps readers discover unique homes, connect with builders, and explore alternative living.
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