This Oregon Tiny Home Has a Freestanding Bathtub and More Storage Than You’d Ever Expect

Some tiny homes ask you to settle. Cramped kitchens, awkward layouts, a bathroom you have to apologize for. The Black Butte by Spindrift Homes is not that version. Originally built as a fully custom commission, the design earned enough attention that Oregon-based Spindrift added it to its permanent catalog. The community responded, and it’s easy to see why.

At 30 feet long and 10 feet wide, the Black Butte sits on the broader end of the towable tiny home spectrum. That extra width changes everything. It’s the difference between a space that feels edited and one that actually breathes. Spindrift describes it as “bold, design-forward” and a home that “feels both expansive and grounded,” and for once, the marketing language holds up. The proportions are generous, the light moves well through the interior, and the layout doesn’t fight itself.

Designer: Spindrift Homes

The living room sits on a slightly raised platform, a quiet design move that unlocks a serious amount of hidden storage underneath. It’s the kind of detail you miss on first glance but appreciate every single day. The kitchen holds its own, too, designed for people who actually cook rather than people who just need somewhere to store a microwave. Every inch is considered without feeling precious about it.

The bathroom is where the Black Butte makes its strongest statement. A freestanding bathtub in a tiny home is not a small decision, and Spindrift leaned into it completely. It reads less like a compact washroom and more like a spa you happen to sleep near. The on-demand water heater and mini-split with heating and cooling round out a home that operates as comfortably as it looks.

Built on a triple-axle custom trailer, the Black Butte is technically mobile, though it’s designed to thrive parked in one place. Think of a permanent base camp rather than a vehicle. Pricing starts at $160,000 before customization, with deliveries scheduled for fall 2026. Buyers can adjust finishes and details while keeping the layout intact, which is exactly how a design this considered should be handled. Tiny living has spent years trying to prove itself. The Black Butte doesn’t try. It just shows up.