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Tiny house with ground floor bedroom and large kitchen


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This is a tiny house with a ground floor bedroom, a large kitchen, and two loft spaces.

It’s built by Rewild Homes. The kitchen seems good enough for a chef, doesn’t it?

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28-foot Albatross tiny house by Rewild Homes w/ main-floor bedroom, two lofts, and a kitchen good enough for a chef!

Tiny house with ground floor bedroom plus two lofts by Rewild Homes

Images © Rewild Homes

28-Foot Albatross Tiny Home by Rewild Homes 28-Foot Albatross Tiny Home by Rewild Homes Tiny house with ground floor bedroom plus two lofts by Rewild Homes Tiny house with ground floor bedroom plus two lofts by Rewild Homes Tiny house with ground floor bedroom plus two lofts by Rewild Homes Tiny house with ground floor bedroom plus two lofts by Rewild Homes 28-Foot Albatross Tiny Home by Rewild Homes 28-Foot Albatross Tiny Home by Rewild Homes 28-Foot Albatross Tiny Home by Rewild Homes 28-Foot Albatross Tiny Home by Rewild Homes 28-Foot Albatross Tiny Home by Rewild Homes 28-Foot Albatross Tiny Home by Rewild Homes

Images © Rewild Homes

A ground floor bedroom and two private cozy loft spaces means no going downstairs for midnight bathroom breaks and plenty of room for guests.

Three bedrooms, one bathtub, seven appliances, 18’ of granite, handcrafted fir cabinetry + doors made with local wood, and a whole lotta love – that’s just a taste of what went into our latest 28’ Albatross tiny home. A lower bedroom with a built-in wardrobe and desk along with two private upper lofts gives you all of the space you need for spare bedrooms, a home office, space for camping gear, or just some extra storage room! A split air A/C unit means you’ll always be the perfect temperature and with the full-sized kitchen appliances and ample cabinetry throughout you’ll feel like you’ve got space to spare.

Sources

  1. The Albatross THOW – Rewild Homes – More Photos/Info
  2. Rewild Homes – Facebook
  3. Rewild Homes – Website
  4. Rewild Homes – Get a Quote

Our big thanks to Rewild Homes for sharing!🙏

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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!
{ 15 comments… add one }
  • Angela
    February 27, 2019, 7:14 pm

    To all of you carrying on about no seating, these high-end tinies are made by companies who are willing to customize them, for the most part. If you want more seating, you either knock out the ground-floor BR and turn it into living room area, or you do a Murphy bed or convertible sofa and have it do double duty, living room by day, sleeping area by night. If you want to knock out the cooktop and dishwasher and have a stackable washer/dryer and more counter space, OK. Flushable toilet? You got it. What you see is just the basic layout. You usually can customize.

    • Eric
      March 1, 2019, 11:57 pm

      Totally agree with your comment. Sometimes I wonder if some people actually have a functioning brain?

      As for the comments about a chef’s kitchen… sorry, any kitchen is a chef’s kitchen. Ever had a look behind the scenes at any of your favourite restaurants? You’d probably be shocked at how small they are and how nobody gets burned or seriously injured in those work environments.

      To me, it’s just a normal kitchen. End of Story. Lack of lounging space is the killer for me and probably the reason why I’d go for a small home rather than a tiny home. Ala the Nils Pearson designed River Road house that was featured way back in about 2013 or so.

      Oh, Lotto, please come my way… lol

      • Donna Rae
        February 9, 2020, 4:04 pm

        Why have a Comments section if you are going to berate people for making a comment? You wonder if people have a brain? That’s a bit harsh, don’t you think? Oh, go ahead and think anything you want but as a representative of this newsletter, isn’t it in the newsletter’s best interest to be polite and keep your negative comments to yourself? This is very disappointing.

        • Donna Rae
          February 9, 2020, 4:08 pm

          I’m sorry. I see that Eric isn’t with the newsletter. That doesn’t make his comment any less inappropriate. People like to make comments about how they would change things. Why does it matter to anyone else? Being snarky just seems a bit mean, that’s all.

      • Eric
        February 10, 2020, 3:47 am

        Oh dear Donna Rae, you must be new. Thinking I’m a part of the newsletter staff. I don’t know what the world is coming to. You get offended by a throwaway line? Come on, time to get a life and stop taking things quite so seriously don’t you think? Its not like I called someone a “bleep.” Which quite frankly I would never, ever do online. And especially to Alex and his amazing staff who work tirelessly with this newsletter. And if I did, he’d quite rightly blacklist me for it.

        And, sincerely, I hope you have a really nice day today.

        • Jackie
          April 11, 2022, 5:42 pm

          About the compact w/d. YouTube video from this woman who said everything that was bad (that I already figured) about this. Forget a true blanket getting washed, there is no room. The light throws could though. 2 towels and a pair of jeans max. It takes up to 4 hours to do one small load and then you have to remember to stop the drying cycle before things “dry” due to the wrinkling which will remain if you don’t. I’ve drawn up my floor plan where the stacked one piece full size w/d will work depending on its placement 🙂 However, it’s location needs to be “used” as a type of hallway from the front door with the bathroom exterior wall for the other side “hallway” and directly in front would be the fridge/lower pull out freezer. I can hardly wait, though this would not qualify as a true tiny home, less than 400sq.ft. is still “tiny” 🙂

  • Michael
    February 27, 2019, 10:33 pm

    The lack of a living room and the bar style dining space which doesn’t fit to a chef’s kitchen beside the outer appearance are the downsides of this design. Who wants to sit on a narrow bar to enjoy life and good food?
    I have been a friend of lift up beds which are saving a lot of floor space instead of lofts, Sorage should not be on top it should be down.

  • Karen Blackburn
    February 28, 2019, 4:28 am

    Problem with lift up beds is first, no storage because putting a platform of storage beneath the mattress would be a waste of time, secondly you can’t use the space for anything full time because whatever is there has to move when the bed comes down and lastly, if it is a sofa underneath the bed as soon as the occupier wants to go to bed (9pm latest for me) then anyone else in the house loses their seating so tough luck if you watch a programme or film on TV that starts at that time, or just go to sleep later. As a spare bed they are good, or even in a tiny bedsit but not in a house with 2 other bedrooms for guests. For me, I would lose half of the kitchen as I am not a chef, put in a proper dining nook with a bench and a couple of easy chairs, one for me and one for the cat. Like the privacy of the lofts as this means visitors can sleep off the night before without me waking them as I get up at 5am to start the day (hence the early night). Oh, and given it’s a chef’s kitchen, my neighbour who’s a chef is up at 4am and off to work at 5am. Those doors closing off all the different sleeping areas are made with him in mind.

  • e.a.f.
    December 31, 2019, 3:34 pm

    every one has an opinion on each home. what is so wonderful about the tiny/small homes, is usually they’re built for the customer. Each person has the home they need or want. Now the small home for the retired person is much more me, I don’t cook. This home is great for the person who likes to cook. If you’re using it as a summer home, for some its perfect. they cook with all the equipment they will ever need and they live outside. This home would also be great for those who spend most of their time outdoors, skiing, hiking, whatever and come in to eat and sleep. Lots of people just want to hang out in the kitchen and then go to bed and get ready for the next day. Its a lovely kitchen.

  • Christina Galin
    February 8, 2020, 7:47 pm

    Now, if the interior was done in either ship lap or knotty pine, and stone floors in the kitchen and wood in the rest, and a little bit bigger rooms on either end and a loft like a park model, I would be really happy living in it plus a fireplace. But this is beautiful in itself.

  • Maggie
    February 8, 2020, 8:14 pm

    There’s room for a double sink so a drainer can go on one side. And, if the bed was not built in, I would put my double bed so I could actually get around it to change the sheets! In other words, easy to make it perfect for me!

  • Nerida
    February 9, 2020, 8:54 am

    One of the best I have seen I think. Top 10 at least. However, I am one who wants a down stairs sitting room plus bed, without dual functionality. That aside, this really has my name on it and I wasnt going to go for one single structure to meet my needs. Love it.

  • Tim Roy
    February 9, 2020, 10:37 am

    I don’t understand the point of the cooktop separate from the oven. Seems it would be more expensive to have the two separate appliances, you don’t gain any counter space from it and you loose a large drawer that could be above the two pot drawers?

    • e.a.f.
      February 10, 2020, 12:23 am

      For some, the price isn’t the main concern, its what works best for them. Some people don’t like stoves with ovens. For those who have difficulty bending and lifting, a wall oven is much better. I switched from a regular dishwasher to a one drawer style from Phiser Paxel. Its easier on the back. My next stove will most likely be a wall oven with stove top because getting a turkey out of a regular oven is too hard Or I may just skip the oven and have a toaster oven.

  • BJ
    February 10, 2020, 12:48 am

    It looks like a very nice home. I personally would ask not to have bed built in, so I can put in a movable one.
    I think the long big kitchen is a bit much. I’ve cooked in Restaurants for years. I don’t wan to run down one side and go all the way to other. A few simple steps is good. As the seat in kitchen, there is one, so there is cabinets underneath, I would give up a cabinet to have another chair. And I’d ask to change the end 2 seats so its not high
    bar stools. A fold out table for 2 or 3 to sit comfortable. You could always have a office or art room or kids room in that extra loft space. Or a cat space for those with a pet. It does certainly look nice.

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