≡ Menu

The Evergreen by Vagabond Haven: A Two-Bedroom Modular Home in 441 Square Feet

Vagabond Haven made its name building beautifully simple mobile tiny houses, and the Evergreen is the Swedish company’s first step up: its very first modular home, designed for people who want a little more space and flexibility without losing the craftsmanship and charm of a tiny house. Two seamlessly connected modules join to create a single, open 41-square-meter (about 441 sq ft) home with two real bedrooms, a full kitchen, a proper bathroom, and a bright open-plan living and dining area. Clad in ThermoWood and metal with a steel roof and triple-glazed windows, and configurable from the structure right down to the toilet style, the Evergreen is built to work as a year-round residence, a guest house, or a rentable retreat. Here’s a full look inside — you can also explore it on the Vagabond Haven website.

The Vagabond Haven Evergreen modular home clad in ThermoWood and black metal with a steel roof and large angular window

Images courtesy of Vagabond Haven


Two Modules, One Spacious Home

The Evergreen is built from two factory-made modules, each measuring 8.3m × 3.0m, that connect on site into a single home roughly 8.3m long and 6m wide (about 27′ × 20′) with a 4m ridge height. Because the floor plan opens across both modules rather than down a single narrow box, the interior feels genuinely room-like — you get clear zones for living, cooking, sleeping, and bathing instead of one multipurpose space. The exterior pairs warm ThermoWood siding with crisp black metal and a steel roof, and triple-pane insulated, tempered-glass windows and doors keep it comfortable in a Scandinavian climate. A single entrance door and two sets of double terrace doors connect the inside to the landscape.

The open-plan living and kitchen layout of the Vagabond Haven Evergreen with green cabinetry and a large bookcase

Image courtesy of Vagabond Haven

An Open-Plan Living and Dining Space

The heart of the Evergreen is a connected living and dining area finished in the warm, muted palette Vagabond Haven favors — wood ceilings, sage-green cabinetry, and oak surfaces. There’s room for a six-person dining table, a wooden bench with built-in storage, a generous bookcase, and a sofa with a sleeping function for overnight guests, plus a hanging cabinet sized for a 55-inch TV. It’s the kind of layout that makes a small home feel social and livable rather than cramped, and the terrace doors keep it flooded with daylight.

The dining area and green kitchen inside the Vagabond Haven Evergreen with a wood table and oak counters

Image courtesy of Vagabond Haven

A Full-Size Kitchen

The kitchen is a real one, not a token galley. A run of upper and lower cabinets frames a three-layer oak countertop, with a built-in dishwasher, a full-size refrigerator, your choice of electric or gas oven, induction or gas cooktop, a proper range hood, and a protective glass backsplash. For a home this size, that’s a kitchen you could genuinely cook in every day — and because nearly everything is configurable, you can choose the cabinet and countertop colors to suit your taste.

The Vagabond Haven Evergreen kitchen with sage-green cabinets, oak counters, induction cooktop, and a built-in oven

Image courtesy of Vagabond Haven

Two Bedrooms for Real Flexibility

This is where the modular footprint really pays off: the Evergreen has two separate bedrooms, both behind solid hinged wooden doors. That makes it work for a couple with a guest room, a small family, or anyone who wants a dedicated office that isn’t the kitchen table.

The Vagabond Haven Evergreen living area looking through to two separate bedrooms

Image courtesy of Vagabond Haven

The master bedroom holds a double bed (140 or 160 × 200 cm) with a headboard and an optional lifting frame for under-bed storage, plus a built-in wardrobe and space for a 43-inch TV. It’s a calm, private room with its own window framing the outdoors.

The master bedroom of the Vagabond Haven Evergreen with a double bed and framed artwork

Image courtesy of Vagabond Haven

The second, smaller bedroom is set up to multitask: a single bed with a lifting frame, a desk, an armchair, and a bookcase turn it into a guest room and home office in one. Little touches like the wall-mounted pegboard and shelf keep the workspace tidy without eating floor space.

The second bedroom of the Vagabond Haven Evergreen set up as a home office with a desk and pegboard

Image courtesy of Vagabond Haven

A Full Bathroom With Real Options

The bathroom is fully appointed and finished with wet-room wall panels for durability. It includes an 80 × 80 cm shower cabin, a wall-hung toilet, a washbasin cabinet, wall shelves, a boiler cabinet, and a preparation point for a washing machine. Vagabond Haven offers a range of toilet options to match how and where you’ll use the home — standard flush, composting, a Separett Villa, or a Cinderella incinerating toilet — which is exactly the kind of flexibility you want if you’re placing the Evergreen off-grid or somewhere without a sewer connection.

The Vagabond Haven Evergreen bathroom with a corner shower cabin, wall-hung toilet, and wood-topped vanity

Image courtesy of Vagabond Haven

Heating, Power, and Off-Grid Options

Because it’s a configured home rather than a fixed product, you can specify the Evergreen to match your climate and site. Heating choices run from electric radiators and infrared heating mirrors to infrared floor heating, an air-to-air heat pump, or a wood or pellet stove. Electrical comes pre-installed as 3-phase (230V or 400V, 16A or 32A) with LED lighting and dimmers, and a solar system is available. On the plumbing side you can add water tanks and a pump plus a rainwater-harvesting system, and ventilation can include a heat-recovery recuperator — everything you’d want to run the home comfortably and efficiently, on or off the grid.

The entrance and kitchen of the Vagabond Haven Evergreen with a glass door and control panel

Image courtesy of Vagabond Haven

The Floor Plan

Seen from above, the two-module layout makes sense at a glance: an open living, dining, and kitchen zone runs across the main module, with the master bedroom, the second bedroom/office, and the bathroom arranged along the other. It’s a genuinely residential floor plan packed into a compact, transportable footprint.

An overhead cutaway floor plan of the two-module Vagabond Haven Evergreen showing the living area, kitchen, two bedrooms, and bathroom

Image courtesy of Vagabond Haven

Design Details

  • Builder: Vagabond Haven (Sweden)
  • Model: Evergreen (the company’s first modular home)
  • Footprint: 8.3 m × 6 m (about 27′ × 20′); two modules of 8.3 m × 3.0 m each
  • Height: 4 m (about 13’1″)
  • Living area: 41 m² (about 441 sq ft)
  • Weight: up to 14 t
  • Layout: open living/dining/kitchen, master bedroom, second bedroom/office, full bathroom
  • Exterior: ThermoWood and metal siding, steel roof, triple-pane insulated tempered glazing, glass-wool insulation
  • Kitchen: oak countertop, dishwasher, full-size fridge, oven, cooktop, range hood
  • Heating options: heat pump, wood or pellet stove, electric/infrared heating
  • Systems: 3-phase electrical, optional solar, rainwater harvesting, heat-recovery ventilation
  • Pricing: configured and quoted through Vagabond Haven’s online configurator

What Makes the Evergreen Special

  • Two true bedrooms. The two-module design delivers separate, door-closed bedrooms — rare in a home this compact.
  • A residential-grade kitchen and bath. Dishwasher, full-size fridge, oven, and a real shower room make it livable full time.
  • Configurable down to the details. Choose finishes, heating, toilet type, and systems to match your site and budget.
  • Off-grid capable. Solar, rainwater harvesting, and composting or incinerating toilet options open up remote placements.
  • Built for the cold. ThermoWood, a steel roof, triple glazing, and glass-wool insulation suit a true four-season climate.

Learn More

Highlights

  • Vagabond Haven’s first modular home, built from two connected modules
  • 41 m² (about 441 sq ft) with two bedrooms and a full bathroom
  • Open-plan living and dining with a six-person table and sofa bed
  • Full kitchen with dishwasher, oven, and a large refrigerator
  • ThermoWood and metal exterior with a steel roof and triple glazing
  • Heat pump, wood/pellet stove, and infrared heating options
  • Solar, rainwater harvesting, and composting-toilet options for off-grid living
  • Fully customizable through the online configurator

Explore More Small Homes

Subscribe to our free newsletters for more small homes and cabins like this one:

This post may contain affiliate links and/or sponsored content.

The following two tabs change content below.

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.
{ 0 comments… add one }

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.