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Craft House’s Tommy tiny house sleeps six in 23.6 feet

Craft House packed six sleeping spots into 23.6 feet with a folding staircase, dual lofts and a road-legal shell built for year-round use.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
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Craft House’s Tommy tiny house sleeps six in 23.6 feet
Source: newatlas.com
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Craft House’s Tommy took the anti-gimmick route and made the square footage work. At just 23.6 feet long, the mobile home still slept up to six people, turning a footprint that often serves one or two adults into a compact family layout with real daily function.

The trick was not visual drama but circulation. A folding staircase saved floor space when it was not in use, and the home’s stacked sleeping arrangement kept the interior from feeling like a bunk-room squeezed into a trailer. That mattered because the Tommy was aimed at buyers who needed a practical house, not a novelty shell: families, couples with guests, or small groups that still wanted towable living.

Craft House described the Tommy as a fully functional mobile home for year-round use and said it was approved for road traffic. The company listed the model at 187,000 PLN net, putting it in the segment where buyers expect durability, mobility and enough room to live in the house every day, not just vacation in it. It also offered optional off-grid operation, widening the appeal for owners who want to park farther from utilities without giving up basic comfort.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The layout was tightly measured. Craft House gave the Tommy’s dimensions as 7.20 meters long, 2.5 meters wide and 4 meters high at the roof ridge. Usable space was split into a 12-square-meter ground floor, a 4.6-square-meter mezzanine, a 4.2-square-meter mezzanine and a 2.6-square-meter bathroom. That bathroom alone takes on unusual importance in a tiny house of this size, because once six sleepers are involved, the difference between a decorative wet bath and a properly sized daily-use room becomes obvious fast.

The company said it usually built its houses on a 2.55 by 7 meter trailer, and its modular and mobile homes were available in Poland, Austria, Germany, France and Ireland. That footprint and reach place the Tommy squarely in the part of the tiny-house market that is moving beyond ultra-compact showpieces and toward road-legal homes that can actually handle family life. In other words, the Tommy’s real selling point was not that it was small. It was that it stayed usable while it was small.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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