Vagabond Haven’s Evergreen expands tiny homes into a roomier modular house
Vagabond Haven’s Evergreen turns a tiny-house maker’s first modular model into a 441-square-foot, two-bedroom home built for year-round living.

Vagabond Haven has pushed its tiny-house lineup into new territory with Evergreen, a 441-square-foot modular home that replaces the usual single-box squeeze with two seamlessly connected modules and two real bedrooms. The Swedish builder says it is its “very first modular home,” and at 41 square meters it is also its largest house in the modular category.
That matters because Evergreen does not read like a scaled-up trailer tiny house. Instead, it opens into a full kitchen, a proper bathroom, and an open living and dining area that feels closer to a compact apartment than a narrow towable cabin. Vagabond Haven is positioning the model as a primary residence, a guest house, or a rentable retreat, which broadens its appeal well beyond the minimalist, move-every-few-months crowd.
The design language stays firmly in Vagabond Haven’s Scandinavian lane. Wood ceilings, sage cabinetry, and oak surfaces give the interior a warm finish, while the layout leaves room for a six-person dining table, a storage bench, a bookshelf, and a sofa bed. The kitchen is set up to function like a real home, with a dishwasher, a full-size fridge, and configurable cooktop and oven options.
Outside, Evergreen leans into durability instead of novelty. ThermoWood siding, a steel roof, triple-glazed windows, and a metal exterior point to a house built for year-round living in Scandinavian conditions, not just fair-weather use. That lines up with Vagabond Haven’s long-running pitch, summed up in its brand motto, “build small, live big.”

The company’s roots help explain the shift. Vagabond Haven says its tiny-house production began in 2019, when founder Manuel started working with Aurora Company in Poland. Since then, the brand has been tied to fully mobile tiny homes, but Evergreen shows how far that idea can stretch once portability stops being the main selling point.
Vagabond Haven is already listing Evergreen as a ready-built modular house for €90,000 ex. VAT, which places it squarely in the real market rather than in concept territory. For tiny-house buyers who want the footprint discipline without giving up two bedrooms and everyday utility, Evergreen looks less like a novelty and more like a sign that small living is moving toward modular homes that can stay put and still feel livable.
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