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If the Lukas and Samuel are Craft House’s compact modular homes, the Jake is the Polish builder’s flagship — and it shows. This 12-meter modular house leads with a dramatic arched gable of double-height glass, packs in two bedrooms (one on the ground floor, one in the mezzanine), and arrives with a full off-grid energy package as standard: 8.5 kW of rooftop solar, a heat pump, and an inverter with battery storage. Add a sage-green island kitchen, a wood-and-marble bathroom, and optional terraces, a carport, and a gazebo, and the Jake stops feeling like a tiny house altogether and starts feeling like a self-sufficient small home.

Jake flagship modular house by Craft House with an arched glass gable end, wood cladding, and charcoal standing-seam metal

Images courtesy of Craft House

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After touring the gable-roofed Lukas, we’re staying in Craft House’s modular range with its single-pitch sibling, the Samuel. This 10-meter modular house from the Polish builder takes a different tack: a low shed roof, a warm spruce-lined interior in place of marble and white, and one of the most generous lofts in the lineup — a full 13-square-meter mezzanine over a 26-square-meter ground floor that already includes a private bedroom. The result is a cabin-like modern home with real separation between sleeping and living, finished for year-round use.

Samuel modular house by Craft House clad in wood and charcoal metal with a single-pitch roof in a snowy forest

Images courtesy of Craft House

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Up to now we’ve toured Craft House’s lineup of mobile tiny homes on wheels, but the Polish builder also makes a larger modular range — and the Lukas is a standout. At 10 meters long and 3.5 meters wide, this gable-roofed modular house wraps 28.2 square meters around something most tiny homes have to choose between: a real ground-floor bedroom and a skylit sleeping mezzanine up top. Add a full island kitchen with a dishwasher, a marble bathroom with a washing machine, underfloor heating, and triple-glazed windows, and the Lukas feels far more like a compact modern house than a downsized one.

Lukas modular house by Craft House with a charcoal gable roof and thermo-pine wood cladding in a green rural setting

Images courtesy of Craft House

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Most tiny houses promise the freedom to go anywhere, but few are actually built to live anywhere. The Off-Grid model from Poland’s Craft House is the rare one that genuinely is: a compact 6-meter home on a dual-axle trailer that pairs a roof full of solar panels with a real wood-burning cook stove, so it can keep the lights on and dinner warm whether or not there’s a hookup in sight. With a charcoal standing-seam shell, warm thermo-pine siding, and a bright Scandinavian-spruce interior, it looks every bit as good parked in a manicured garden as it would tucked into the woods.

Off-Grid Craft House tiny house with rooftop solar panels and two-tone charcoal and wood exterior

Images courtesy of Craft House

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Craft House builds an entire lineup of modern mobile tiny homes, and the Mini is exactly what its name promises: the smallest and most affordable of the bunch. At just 6 meters long it still manages a full kitchen, a complete bathroom, and a sleeping loft in about 16.8 square meters — all wrapped in warm Scandinavian spruce with the same all-season build (underfloor heating and smart A/C) as its bigger siblings like the Katrin and Justine. Built in Poland on a road-ready SYMA trailer and priced from 144,000 PLN (roughly €34,000 / $36,000), it’s the easiest way into the Craft House family. Let’s take a look.

The Mini tiny house by Craft House with torched-wood siding and a single-pitch roof, on its trailer
The Mini mobile tiny house by Craft House. Images courtesy of Craft House.

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We’ve now toured four Craft House models — the two-loft Tommy, the customizable Erica, the all-wood Adams, and the single-level Justine — and the Katrin rounds out the lineup as the roomiest of the 7.2-meter homes. This gable-roofed mobile tiny house packs about 23.4 square meters across a living room with a kitchenette, a bathroom, and two separate sleeping lofts, and the build shown here even adds a real wood-burning stove. Built in Poland on a road-ready SYMA trailer for 199,000 PLN (roughly €47,000 / $50,000) and endlessly customizable, it’s a true all-season cabin on wheels. Watch the video tour below, then explore the photos.

The Katrin tiny house by Craft House with wood and gray standing-seam siding, a gable roof, and a wood-stove chimney, in the snow
The Katrin mobile tiny house by Craft House. Images courtesy of Craft House.

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We’ve climbed the lofts of the Tommy, the Erica, and the Adams — but the Justine by Craft House does something none of its siblings do: it puts the bedroom on the ground floor. At 8.4 meters long it’s the largest of the bunch, yet it’s a true single-level home with no lofts and no ladders — a walk-in bedroom with a real 160×200 cm bed, a living room with a full kitchenette, and a complete bathroom, all wrapped in warm Scandinavian spruce under a gable roof. Built in Poland on a road-ready SYMA trailer for 199,000 PLN (roughly €47,000 / $50,000), it’s the accessible, stair-free option in the lineup. Watch the video tour below, then explore the photos.

The Justine tiny house by Craft House with thermo-pine siding and a charcoal standing-seam gable roof in a snowy forest
The Justine mobile tiny house by Craft House. Images courtesy of Craft House.

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We’ve toured the Tommy and the Erica, and today we’re rounding out the Craft House lineup with the Adams — the warmest and most cabin-like of the trio. Built in Poland on a road-ready SYMA trailer, this 7.2-meter gable-roofed mobile tiny house wraps about 18.8 square meters into a living room with a kitchenette, a full bathroom, and a sleeping mezzanine (a sofa bed adds room for guests). What sets it apart is the all-natural-wood interior bathed in light from a band of clerestory windows tucked under the gable peak — and at 182,000 PLN (roughly €43,000 / $46,000), it’s the most affordable of the three. Let’s take a look.

The Adams tiny house by Craft House with honey-toned wood siding and a charcoal metal gable, on its trailer
The Adams mobile tiny house by Craft House. Images courtesy of Craft House.

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Recently we toured the Tommy by Craft House; today we’re back with its gable-roofed sibling, the Erica — and this one comes with a twist. The Erica is a 7.2-meter mobile tiny house built in Poland with a single sleeping mezzanine, a full kitchen and bathroom, and the same all-season construction Craft House is known for — but the company shows it in two dramatically different custom builds: one dark, moody, and glamorous, the other a bright Scandinavian version with a rooftop solar terrace and off-grid power. It’s a perfect illustration of just how customizable these homes are, so let’s tour both.

The Erica tiny house by Craft House in yellow and black with a rooftop terrace, set in a Polish meadow
The Erica mobile tiny house by Craft House, shown here in its bright Scandinavian build. Images courtesy of Craft House.

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