
Portugal has long exported culture, cuisine, and craftsmanship. Now, it’s quietly exporting a new kind of living — one that fits on a trailer. The Gerês is Casagaea’s most ambitious tiny home to date. Named after one of Portugal’s most breathtaking national parks, the Gerês is built on a double-axle trailer stretching just 7.8 meters (25.7 ft) in length — compact enough to tow, generous enough to actually live in.
The exterior is clad in engineered wood that ages gracefully, with a small storage box tucked near the tow hitch — a quiet, practical detail that tells you everything about how thoughtfully the whole thing has been considered.
Designer: Casagaea


Step inside and the 30 square meters (322 sq ft) feel surprisingly unhurried. The layout centers on an open-plan kitchen and living area, the kind of space that rewards the people who believe a home doesn’t need to be large to feel alive. The kitchen includes a breakfast bar that seats two — a social anchor in a compact floorplan — while the bathroom sits neatly off to the side. The interior leans into simple wood finishes throughout, which keeps the warmth tangible and the aesthetic clean without veering into the sterile.
What makes the Gerês genuinely surprising is its sleeping capacity. The home sleeps up to six adults — two bedrooms do the heavy lifting, with the living area stretching to accommodate two more when needed. For a structure that can be hitched to a truck and moved across the country, that’s a remarkable feat of spatial thinking. It doesn’t feel like a compromise. It feels like a decision — one made by people who understand that mobility and comfort don’t have to cancel each other out.


Casagaea also offers optional off-grid upgrades, which open the Gerês up to placements far beyond the reach of traditional infrastructure. Whether parked at the edge of a pine forest or settled on a rural plot in the Alentejo, the home carries its context well. The engineered wood cladding doesn’t fight the landscape — it joins it.
The tiny home movement has produced no shortage of novelty concepts that look better in renders than in reality. The Gerês sits in a different category. It’s a road-ready home built by a Portuguese studio that seems less interested in hype and more interested in the long game — designing spaces that hold up not just aesthetically, but in the day-to-day texture of actual life. That restraint, in a category prone to excess, might be its most compelling design feature of all.


