Fritz Tiny Homes launches Halcyon Grand with two private bedrooms
Fritz Tiny Homes’ 400-square-foot Halcyon Grand adds two private bedrooms, a full kitchen and a loft that closes off completely.

Fritz Tiny Homes has pushed its Halcyon line into bigger, pricier territory with the Halcyon Grand, a certified Park Model RV that measures 44.5 by 10.5 feet and totals 400 square feet. That makes it the company’s largest model to date, and the pitch is simple: this is a tiny home that stops forcing buyers to choose between compact living and real comfort.
The layout is what changes the conversation. Instead of one sleeping space packed into a loft or a sofa-bed setup, the Halcyon Grand splits the plan into two private bedrooms. The main-floor master suite sits at one end with floor-to-ceiling glass, a sliding patio door to a covered deck, a full wall wardrobe and storage built into the bed frame. The loft becomes a second bedroom that can close off completely, which Fritz says came straight from customer demand for more privacy. In the middle, the kitchen and dining core is built for actual use, not just reheating, and the table for four includes storage underneath.

That extra room comes with a bathroom that is more generous than most tiny-home buyers are used to. Fritz says the bathroom has 6'10 ceilings and comes standard with a soaker tub, with options for a concrete-and-glass shower, a washer-dryer combo, or a side-by-side laundry set if the plan is reworked. The finish package leans warm and residential, with custom concrete tile, hardwood floors, timber accents, dimmable LED lighting and millwork meant to make every inch feel intentional.
The company is betting the Halcyon Grand lands with buyers who want a tiny footprint without tiny-home fatigue. Fritz says the model is designed for “maximum livability” and is meant for people who want to “LIVE,” whether that means a full-time home, guest house, ADU, vacation retreat or a family of four. Pricing starts at CAD 330,225 plus tax, about USD 239,507 depending on exchange rates. The first Halcyon Grand was shipped to Illinois, and another was headed to Washington in spring 2025, suggesting the market for a bigger tiny home is already stretching well beyond Alberta.

That matters for Fritz Tiny Homes, an Alberta family business based in Spruce Grove that says it delivers internationally. Kevin Fritz and Heather Fritz built the company from earlier Halcyon models that typically ran from 190 to 325 square feet and about $65,000 to $186,000. By the time a 400-square-foot tiny home can hold two private bedrooms, a king-size primary suite and a dining table for four, it is still tiny on paper, but it starts to look a lot less tiny in daily life.
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