Tink by Modern Tiny Living packs big features into 28 feet
Modern Tiny Living unveiled the Tink, a 28 ft towable tiny house focused on storage-first design and zoned living. It demonstrates how a compact trailer can serve full-time two-person households and guests.

The Tink is a new custom 28 ft (8.5 m) towable tiny house that prioritizes flexible living, abundant storage and repeated relocation. Modern Tiny Living built the floorplan around distinct living zones and multiple integrated storage layers to squeeze usable space out of a modest footprint.
Up front, a raised social living area centers on U-shaped seating that converts into a guest double bed. Designers tucked storage under the floor and inside the steps up to the loft, plus conventional cabinets and sofa storage, creating several layers of hidden capacity. Opposite the living zone, a full kitchen includes a farmhouse sink, a gas range and a large quad-door refrigerator, delivering a more conventional food-prep experience than many tiny builds of this length.
At the far end from the living area, the Tink dedicates a separate home-office space with its own exterior entrance, a rare layout decision that treats working-from-home as a primary function rather than an afterthought. Between these zones sits a compact but conventional bathroom with a shower and a flushing toilet, keeping day-to-day living closer to conventional house standards.
Sleeping quarters are in a loft reached by stairs that double as storage. The trailer uses a triple-axle chassis based on the Kokosing platform, a setup aimed at regular relocation and improved load distribution. The Kokosing model starts at US$109,000, but no public price has been released for this bespoke Tink build.

Materials choices lean practical: an engineered wood exterior, a steel roof and poplar interior detailing that balance durability with a warm finish. Visual documentation accompanying the reveal shows multiple interior arrangements, the convertible living-to-guest setup and the various storage strategies in action, helping builders and convertors translate ideas to their own projects.
For tiny-house owners and builders, the Tink offers clear, transferable lessons: prioritize layered storage, zone functions deliberately and treat work space as a separate program when full-time living is the goal. The triple-axle towable platform signals that mobility and a heavier feature set can coexist if weight and layout are planned early.
The Tink illustrates how thoughtful detailing can make 28 feet livable for two people and occasional guests without resorting to extreme compromises. For community members planning their next build or retrofit, adopt the storage-first mindset, test circulation around fixed zones and consider a dedicated entry for work or rental use. Those choices will be what decides whether a tiny house feels tight or comfortably complete.
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