Yanko Design

This Tiny House Spreads Out Like an Apartment and Lives Like One Too

Most tiny houses try to be everything at once. The Miami, the latest park model from Phoenix Building Solutions, gets that. Rather than stacking lofts and squeezing in storage tricks, it spreads out — single-floor, open plan, and unapologetically apartment-like. At 400 square feet, it’s one of the more generously proportioned models in its class, and it wears that space well.

Built on a quad-axle trailer and measuring 11 feet 8 inches wide by 40 feet 3 inches long, the Miami sits closer to the wider end of park model specs. That extra width changes everything. It’s what separates a home that feels borrowed from one that actually feels lived in. The exterior keeps it tight — board-and-batten engineered wood siding, warm timber accents, a clean metal roof, and a monoslope roofline that cuts a sharp silhouette against any backdrop.

Designer: Phoenix Building Solutions

Step inside and the single-level layout does the heavy lifting. The kitchen is the kind of setup most apartment renters would envy — dual-basin stainless steel sink, oven and cooktop, microwave, dishwasher, and a full fridge/freezer. It’s a proper kitchen, not a kitchenette dressed up with good lighting. The living area flows naturally from it, and the large windows pull in enough natural light to make the 400 square feet feel considerably more generous than the number suggests.

The bedroom is where the Miami earns its keep as a two-person dwelling. A double bed sits alongside two built-in wardrobes and a small chair — practical without being sparse. There are no loft ladders to navigate in the dark, no tucked-away sleeping nooks. The single-floor commitment means everything is accessible, which matters more than most people realize until they’re actually living in a small space long-term.

Phoenix Building Solutions, based in Greenville, Alabama, manufactures from a 75,000-square-foot facility certified to ANSI A119.5 standards — a detail that speaks to build quality rather than just curb appeal. The Miami isn’t a concept or a render. It’s a production model from a company with over 130 years of combined industry experience, built for people who want something that lasts.

What makes the Miami genuinely interesting isn’t any single feature — it’s the restraint. Phoenix didn’t overcomplicate it. They took a straightforward idea — comfortable, modern, single-floor tiny living — and executed it cleanly. In a market full of houses competing to cram in one more clever feature, that kind of discipline is harder to pull off than it looks.

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