Yanko Design

This $156K Tiny Home Is Essentially a Tiny Mansion With a Party on Its Roof

The tiny home movement has long wrestled with one stubborn contradiction: how do you downsize without actually feeling like you’ve given something up? Brisbane-based builder Removed Tiny Homes has a compelling answer with the Solace — a wide-body, rooftop-equipped micro-dwelling that reframes what small living can look and feel like.

The Solace sits within Removed Tiny Homes’ newly launched Tiny Mansion collection, a premium lineup designed for people who are genuinely drawn to intentional living but aren’t willing to sacrifice comfort, space, or a little luxury to get there. It’s a category of architecture that’s quietly shifting the tone of the entire tiny home conversation — less rustic escape, more elevated lifestyle choice.

Designer: Removed Tiny Homes

At its core, the Solace is built on a triple-axle trailer and measures 10 meters (32.8 ft) long and 3.4 meters (11.1 ft) wide, making it notably broader than most tiny homes on the market. That extra width is immediately felt inside — the layout is open, breathable, and free of the cramped compromises that often define the category. There are no loft sleeping arrangements here. Instead, the single bedroom is a proper retreat, fitted with a king-size bed and a floor-to-ceiling wardrobe that spans the entire right wall. A private glass entrance door connects the bedroom directly to the outdoors, adding a hotel-suite quality that feels anything but modest.

The kitchen and living spaces carry the same thoughtful confidence. Clean lines, full-scale proportions, and modern finishes give the interior a sense of permanence rather than temporariness. The exterior wraps in a combination of corrugated metal and timber, a pairing that reads as both industrial-modern and grounded in natural warmth.

What truly sets the Solace apart is what sits above and below. A large ground-floor deck wraps the front of the home, while an expansive rooftop terrace crowns the structure, generous enough for outdoor dining, lounging, and genuinely hosting guests. It’s a design move that effectively doubles the usable living space without adding a single square foot to the floorplan. That’s smart architecture.

Pricing starts at approximately USD $155,800, with customization options available for those who want to personalize the build. Early buyers can also access a Luxury Living Upgrade Pack, valued at over AUD $30,000, which adds a fully tiled bathroom, optional skylights, and stone kitchen worktops. The Solace doesn’t ask you to romanticize sacrifice. It asks something far more interesting: what if living smaller actually meant living better?

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