Whether you like Baluchon or not, you can’t possibly ignore the French tiny house builders. The company has over time developed a knack to turn compact spaces into beautiful shelters. Baluchon does it with so much consistency and subtle perfection that it’s hard to distinguish its models from each other. Baluchon’s beautiful new creation doing rounds on the internet is the Ræv tiny house.

This tiny house on wheels is build specifically for a client named Søren and his parents Laurent and Christelle. Søren named the tiny house after his favorite animal fox, which translates to Ræv in Danish. The 20-ft-long tiny dwelling follows a resolutely contemporary architecture maximizing small spaces into a dream home.

Ræv tiny house is finished in red cedar cladding and has black aluminum accents that add an aesthetic appeal to it. However, the major highlight of the house is its spruce finished interior which makes up most of limited space. Bathed in natural light, the tiny house interior features a bedroom, living room, bathroom, kitchen, and wardrobe. However, the biggest takeaway is a suspended netted floor that adds additional space you can use for leisure. If required, it can even be used as a additional bed.

It’s not the first time Baluchon has added a suspended netting to its tiny house. We saw the same concept in Sïana tiny house where two loft bedrooms were connected to each other via a netted bridge. Ræv doesn’t have a typical bridge net though, it’s more like a hammock suspended in the air that can be used for relaxation. A wooden cabinet in the loft separates the netting from the bedroom.

Moving downstairs, the tiny house features a living room that is equipped with a large sofa bed offering storage. There is also a small dining table and a wood-burning stove facing each other. On the back end of the tiny house lies a kitchen that incorporates two oak worktops alongside an oven, dishwasher, sink, and fridge/freezer.

Also Read: Best Handpicked Tiny Houses on Wheels of 2022

The kitchen area also accommodates a custom-made wardrobe specifically designed to store owner’s arrows and bows. Other than the basic nitty-gritty, the kitchen also has plenty of drawers to house accessories. A sliding door separates the kitchen from the bathroom which is compact in size but easily accommodates a shower and a dry toilet.

Image: Baluchon
Image: Baluchon
Image: Baluchon
Image: Baluchon
Image: Baluchon
Image: Baluchon
Image: Baluchon
Image: Baluchon
Image: Baluchon
Image: Baluchon
Image: Baluchon

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Atish Sharma is a seasoned journalist, theatre director and PR specialist based in Shimla, India. He boasts over eight years of experience in print, electronic, and digital media, and has played pivotal roles as a field journalist at Hindustan Times. When not weaving a web of words at Homecrux or scouring new tiny houses, you'll discover him immersed in cinema, savouring cult classics, interviewing production designers or embarking on a quest for existential truths, far beyond his fantasy of being a cowboy who never rode a horse.

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