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.
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.
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.
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.
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 mobile tiny house by Craft House. Images courtesy of Craft House.
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 mobile tiny house by Craft House. Images courtesy of Craft House.
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 mobile tiny house by Craft House. Images courtesy of Craft House.
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 mobile tiny house by Craft House. Images courtesy of Craft House.
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 mobile tiny house by Craft House, shown here in its bright Scandinavian build. Images courtesy of Craft House.