Tru Form Tiny’s wider Urban Gable Park brings apartment-like comfort to tiny living
Tru Form Tiny’s $174,000 Urban Gable Park stretches to 11 feet wide, swapping road-rig compromises for single-level, apartment-like comfort.

An 11-foot-wide tiny home is not built for the same compromises as a road rig, and Tru Form Tiny’s Urban Gable Park makes that clear from the first look. The Eugene, Oregon builder lists the model at $174,000 and frames it as a full-time living solution, not a novelty piece, with a 30-foot-long layout on a quad-axle trailer that pushes the category toward park-model comfort instead of constant travel.
The extra width is the point. At 11 feet, the home sits well beyond the standard 8.5-foot tiny-house footprint, giving the interior a more apartment-like feel and helping solve one of the biggest complaints in tiny living: too many homes feel like narrow corridors. Urban Gable Park stays on a single level, so the bedroom has enough ceiling height for comfortable standing, and the layout avoids the ladder-heavy tradeoffs that still define many compact homes. That makes it a stronger fit for downsizers, full-time residents, older buyers, or anyone who wants mobility-conscious design without climbing into a loft every night.
Inside, Tru Form Tiny loaded the model with the kinds of features buyers usually have to fight for in smaller builds. The kitchen includes a dining table for two, a full-size fridge/freezer, dishwasher, oven, induction cooktop and sink, along with plenty of cabinetry. The living room has room for a large sofa and an entertainment center. The bathroom comes with a walk-in shower, vanity sink, flushing toilet and washer/dryer. The bedroom fits a double bed and built-in storage, while the porch and outdoor living area extend the usable footprint beyond the walls.

The tradeoff is mobility. Tru Form Tiny built Urban Gable Park on a quad-axle trailer as a park model, not as a frequent-travel RV, and that means it requires a permit to tow on a public road. RV Industry Association guidance places park model RVs in a separate lane from typical tiny houses: they are primarily designed for temporary living quarters, built on a single chassis, and capped at 400 square feet in setup mode, with transport width over 8.5 feet treated as a key distinction. The model’s size and purpose put it closer to an ADU-style or park-cabin setup than a weekend road house.
That is where Urban Gable Park feels most revealing about where tiny homes are headed. Tru Form Tiny says it has been in business for 10 years and has built more than 350 tiny homes, and its current inventory includes the Urban Gable Park among its available builds. The broader lesson is simple: for buyers who want a tiny home that feels livable every day, not just clever on paper, wider footprints are becoming the feature that matters most.
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