Sol Tiny's Cedar Mobile Double Office Brings Two Workspaces Off-Grid
Sol Tiny packed two private workspaces and a fold-away Murphy bed into just 26 ft of cedar-clad trailer with this off-grid mobile double office.

Sol Tiny's Off-Grid Luxury Mobile Double Office turns the remote-work problem on its head: instead of carving a desk corner out of a tiny house, it makes the workspace the entire point, then fits a sleeping area in around it.
The structure runs 26 ft (7.9 m) long and 10 ft (3 m) wide, sitting on a double-axle trailer platform. The wheels were removed for the listing photos but can be easily re-installed, a practical note that matters because the 10-foot width puts this unit over standard road width thresholds and requires a permit to tow on public roads. The exterior is finished in cedar with a standing-seam metal roof, giving it the warm, workshop aesthetic that distinguishes it from the prefab-shed aesthetic common to mobile office builds.
What separates this unit from a single-room office-on-wheels is the double layout. The Off-Grid Luxury Mobile Double Office has two completely separate entrances, one for each workspace, so two occupants can work independently without crossing through each other's space. The larger of the two workspaces contains a work area, some storage, and a Murphy-style double bed that folds away when not in use, collapsing the live-work boundary that defines so much of tiny house life. The smaller workspace runs leaner: a desk area, storage, and, notably, enough floor space to fit an optional treadmill, a detail that signals Sol Tiny is thinking about full-day occupation rather than occasional use.
The unit is listed through Tiny House Marketplace and private sellers. Specific pricing and location details were not included in the listing materials, and the "Off-Grid" designation in the name implies grid independence, though full system specifications for power, water, or climate control have not been detailed publicly.
For anyone working through the THOW community's ongoing conversation about live-work balance, this build offers a structurally distinct answer: not a loft bed wedged above a standing desk, but two rooms with two doors and enough square footage to actually close one workspace and pretend the other doesn't exist.
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