Vancouver Island-based tiny home builder, Rewild Homes, has unveiled the Rose tiny house on wheels. Measuring 30 feet long and 10.6 feet wide, the Rose tiny house is designed for full-time living. The dwelling is named after the client’s pet donkey. Unlike Goes Tiny’s tiny house horse trailer hybrid, the dwelling doesn’t house the pet animal and the human side by side, but offers plenty of space for the dweller’s family to sleep and relax. We’ll get to these details shortly, but first, let’s take a look at the exterior of the Rose tiny house.
Akin to the Dove tiny house in Rewild’s catalogue, the Rose tiny house boasts a cedar and metal exterior. The tiny home is poised on a triple-axle trailer and is capped by a metal roof, offering safety and durability to the dweller. The biggest USP of the Rose tiny house is the added width. This wider-than-usual footprint gives the home a more open layout than the standard 8.5-foot-wide tiny house, and that extra width shows up most in the bedroom.
Instead of tucking sleeping space into a loft reachable only by ladder, Rewild Homes puts the bedroom on the main floor of the Rose tiny house. The room comes with its own private second entrance, a closet, and storage built into the base of the bed. Despite the spacious private bedroom, the tiny house also accommodates a loft. The space is, however, reserved as a storage room rather than a traditional bedroom.
The tiny home also features a gourmet L-shaped kitchen. The kitchen features white shaker-style cabinetry and rice-toned engineered hardwood flooring that carries through the rest of the home. The kitchen is equipped with a refrigerator, range hood, oven, and features cabinets, drawers, and floating shelves for electric and storage support.
Adjacent to the kitchen is the living room. It is not furnished at the moment; however has decent space to be equipped with a full couch and a coffee table in the future. Sandwiched between the bedroom and the open kitchen and living space is the bathroom.
Also Read: 50 Best Tiny Houses on Wheels That Redefine Modern Living
While it doesn’t feature a bathtub like the Juniper tiny house, it still comes equipped with a glass-enclosed shower, toilet, washing machine, and a stunning vanity. A series of floating shelves adds aesthetic and space for essentials.
According to the dwellers, the Rose tiny house “uses propane for both water heating and cooking, allowing it to run efficiently on just a 50-amp electrical connection.” We have no word on the price, but it should cost well-above $80,000, based on current market rates for a dwelling of this size and capability.

