Meet Rolling Bear Tiny Homes, a Surrey, British Columbia builder we’re featuring for the first time, and the Honeycomb Mobile Office—a tiny house on wheels built not to live in but to work in, wrapping a full-size executive desk, a coffee-bar kitchenette, a sleeping-or-storage loft, and a bathroom inside a 16-by-8.5-foot log-cabin shell topped with a bright red standing-seam roof, so a freelancer, remote worker, or small-business owner can park a genuine private office wherever the view is best.
Images courtesy of Rolling Bear Tiny Homes
Meet Rolling Bear Tiny Homes
Rolling Bear Tiny Homes is based in Surrey, British Columbia, and builds with a crew of seasoned tradespeople—many with more than four decades of hands-on construction experience and a number of them Red Seal certified, Canada’s highest standard of craftsmanship. The company describes itself as guardians of both tradition and innovation in the tiny-home world, and its motto—“We’re not just building homes; we’re crafting a lifestyle”—shows up in the heavy timber work and careful detailing that runs through this build. Their lineup spans three families: tiny houses on wheels, compact studios and home offices like the Honeycomb, and a Lodge series of permanent cabins.
A Workspace Built for the Road
The Honeycomb is aimed squarely at the way a lot of people work now—remotely, and not always from the same place. Built on a 16-by-8.5-foot tandem-axle trailer (about 136 square feet on the main floor), it’s a true tiny house on wheels, but the floor plan is organized around getting work done rather than everyday living. Rolling Bear calls out tech-ready wiring sized for office equipment, energy-efficient systems, and a durable, code-compliant build engineered to hold up to weather and the stresses of towing. Park it in a backyard, on a job site, or at a quiet rural spot, and you have a dedicated office that never shares space with the dishes.
A Real Desk, Not a Laptop on Your Knees
The centerpiece is exactly what most home-office setups lack: a generous, solid-wood executive desk with room to spread out, paired with comfortable seating and framed by a large world-map print and a tall window for natural light. It’s the kind of workstation that signals focus the moment you sit down—a meaningful upgrade over a corner of the kitchen table, and a setting that holds up on a video call without an awkward background.
A Coffee Bar and Small-Space Comforts
Opposite the desk, a granite-topped counter with cabinetry below turns one wall into a tidy coffee-and-snack station, complete with a coffee maker and an under-counter spot for a compact fridge. Shiplap walls, warm wood floors, and a friendly framed bear keep the room feeling like a cabin rather than a cubicle. These are the touches that make a long workday bearable—somewhere to refill your mug without leaving the building, and a space that feels good to spend hours in.
A Loft, a Bathroom, and Room to Step Away
A ladder leads up to a carpeted loft tucked under the gable—handy for storage, or a quiet place to stretch out and recharge between calls. Down below, the Honeycomb includes a bathroom, so there’s no trekking back to the main house during the workday. It’s a small footprint, but the vertical space and thoughtful zoning make it feel like a complete little building rather than a single cramped room.
Log-Cabin Craftsmanship
What really sets this build apart is the woodwork. Step inside and look up: the ceiling is a showpiece of exposed, varnished timber trusses meeting at a peaked ridge, the kind of structural carpentry you’d expect in a mountain lodge, not a 16-foot trailer. Combined with the log-profile siding, stone skirting, and that signature red metal roof outside, the Honeycomb reads as a proper cabin in miniature—evidence of the decades of trade experience Rolling Bear puts into every unit.
Design Details
- Builder: Rolling Bear Tiny Homes, Surrey, British Columbia, Canada
- Model: Honeycomb Mobile Office (compact studio / mobile office series)
- Trailer: 16 ft × 8.5 ft tandem-axle (~136 sq ft main floor)
- Intended use: Mobile office for freelancers, remote workers, and entrepreneurs
- Workspace: Full-size solid-wood executive desk with ergonomic seating
- Kitchenette: Granite-topped counter with coffee station and compact-fridge nook
- Loft: Carpeted gable loft for storage or rest
- Bathroom: Included
- Construction: Eco-conscious materials, energy-efficient systems, code-compliant, tech-ready wiring
- Exterior: Log-profile siding, stone skirting, standing-seam red metal roof, fold-down entry steps
- Interior: Shiplap walls, wood flooring, exposed timber roof trusses
- Price: Not publicly listed—contact Rolling Bear for a quote
What Makes the Honeycomb Stand Out
- Purpose-built to work in: A real desk, office wiring, and a bathroom mean it functions as a true office, not a repurposed shed.
- Separation that sticks: Because it rolls, you can put real distance between work and home without a commute—and leave the job behind by closing one door.
- Lodge-grade craftsmanship: Exposed timber trusses and log siding bring serious woodworking to a small, towable footprint.
- Comfort for the long haul: A coffee bar, natural light, and a loft to step away make full days in a tiny space genuinely livable.
More From Rolling Bear Coming Soon
The Honeycomb is just our first look at Rolling Bear Tiny Homes. The company also builds a full range of tiny houses on wheels—models like the Spirit Bear, Koala Bear, and Salmon Bear—along with a Lodge series of permanent cabins such as the Cub Bear and Fraser Bear. We’re planning to feature more of their builds in future stories, so keep an eye out for additional Rolling Bear tours ahead.
Learn More
You can see more of the Honeycomb Mobile Office and Rolling Bear’s full lineup on their website at rollingbeartinyhomes.com.
Could you get more done in a rolling log cabin like this—and where would you park it? Let us know in the comments.
This post may contain affiliate links and/or sponsored content.
Alex
Latest posts by Alex (see all)
- Rolling Bear’s Honeycomb: A Log-Cabin Mobile Office on Wheels - June 15, 2026
- The Knoll: A Bright, Boho 390-Sq-Ft Gooseneck Tiny House - June 15, 2026
- Fjord: A Four-Season Ski Van Built for Slow Winters in Fernie - June 15, 2026
