This Tiny House Under 36 Square Meters Sleeps Six — and Looks Incredible Doing It

Tiny house culture has spent years fighting the perception that downsizing means settling. The Porto, designed by Portuguese builder Casagaea, makes that argument feel outdated. Built on a double-axle trailer and wrapped in engineered wood cladding, it arrives in two sizes — a 7.8-meter frame at 34.2 square meters, and an 8.4-meter version stretching to 35.6 square meters — with a 4-meter height and 2.5-meter width that keeps it road-legal and genuinely mobile. It’s compact by definition. Cramped, it is not.

What Casagaea has done with the Porto’s footprint is worth paying attention to. The ground floor revolves around an open living area anchored by a sofa — one that moonlights as a guest bed — keeping the social heart of the home generous and uncluttered. The kitchen runs fully equipped: fridge, stove, oven, extractor fan, and sink, built for actual cooking rather than the performative kind you see in renders. An outdoor table integrated into the exterior facade extends the living space outward, blurring the line between inside and out in a way that feels intentional rather than incidental.

Designer: Casagaea

Upstairs, two mezzanine bedrooms are connected by a shared platform — a structural move that does more than just link two rooms. It creates a sense of flow across the upper level that most tiny homes never manage, where loft bedrooms typically feel like afterthoughts bolted above the main floor. Here, the sleeping quarters have a coherence to them. With the sofa bed factored in, the Porto sleeps up to six people — a number that would seem implausible if the floor plan didn’t actually support it.

Casagaea builds its homes in Portugal with a philosophy centered on comfort, design, and sustainability working in parallel rather than in tension. The Porto reflects that clearly. Off-grid configurations are available for those who want to cut ties with utility infrastructure entirely, and all parameters can be adjusted to suit specific project needs. This isn’t a one-size solution dressed up in lifestyle photography — it’s a customizable structure designed to meet real living requirements.

For a home that clocks in under 36 square meters, the Porto carries a surprising amount of ambition. It doesn’t try to mimic a conventional house at reduced scale. It works within its constraints and finds something better on the other side — a living space that feels considered, calm, and quietly confident in what it is. That’s harder to pull off than it looks.