Phoenix unveils Skyview tiny house with porch, loft and bedroom
Phoenix’s Skyview tries to fit a covered porch, loft and ground-floor bedroom into 357 square feet, and the layout feels unusually family-ready.

Phoenix Building Solutions’ Skyview tiny house goes straight at one of the hardest questions in towable design: can a 357-square-foot park model fit a covered porch, a loft and a real main-floor bedroom without turning into a cramped hallway with appliances? Priced from $69,992 and built in Greenville, Alabama, the Skyview answers by treating those spaces as part of one plan instead of crowding them in as extras.
The covered porch does more than dress up the front of the house. In the Skyview, it works as a welcoming entry and as the structural anchor for the staircase that climbs to the loft. That loft gives the model its second sleeping or work zone, which is exactly the kind of flexibility small families and remote workers look for when a single main room has to do too much. It is the difference between a tiny house that merely looks family-friendly and one that can actually absorb daily use.
The strongest move is the main-floor bedroom. Phoenix placed it beyond the kitchen and fitted it with a platform bed with integrated storage drawers, a closet and a sliding door. That setup matters because it gives owners a ground-level sleeping space without forcing them into a ladder-heavy routine every night. In a tiny house this size, that kind of sleeping arrangement is not a luxury detail, it is the feature that keeps the plan practical over time. The wood-clad interior and cabin feel help the house read as cozy rather than compressed, which suits both full-time tiny living and a high-end weekend retreat.

The published specs show how closely the design is tuned to the park-model category. Tiny House Listings places the Skyview at 44 feet long, 10.6 feet wide, 13.4 feet high and 21,000 pounds, with 1 bedroom, 1 bathroom and 1 loft. Phoenix describes the model as a fusion of modern and rustic design with a mono-slope roof, floor-to-ceiling windows and premium upgrade options. The company also says its plant is NTA-certified to ANSI A119.5 standards, while RVIA defines park model RVs as temporary living quarters with a gross trailer area not exceeding 400 square feet in setup mode. Phoenix says its park models are ADUs and are not to be used as permanent dwellings.
That classification is the real fine print behind the Skyview’s appeal. For buyers who want a polished towable with a porch, a loft and a true bedroom, the house makes a coherent case that small-family living can still feel open, but only if every square foot is doing real work.
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