This Scandinavian Tiny Home Has a Dedicated Office & Trades Wheels For 39 Square Meters of Smarter Living

Tiny living has never looked this composed. Vagabond Haven, the Scandinavian tiny home builder known for architect-designed structures built to withstand year-round Nordic conditions, taps directly into that feeling with their latest modular offering: the Lucia. The Lucia sits in Vagabond Haven’s modular homes lineup, meaning it’s fixed to a steel frame on a permanent foundation rather than road-towable — a deliberate trade-off that unlocks noticeably more interior breathing room.

At 39 square meters across a 7.5-meter frame, it’s one of the more generously proportioned models in the lineup, and it reads that way from the moment you step inside. From the outside, the Lucia earns its cottage comparison immediately. It’s clad in either spruce or engineered wood siding, finished with a clean metal roof, and offered in a range of color options — the deep black exterior and the natural wood tone being the most visually striking. A large glass façade opens up the front face of the home, pulling light deep into the ground floor and creating a visual connection to the landscape that most small structures simply can’t achieve.

Designer: Vagabond Haven

Inside, the layout is smarter than its square footage suggests. The ground floor holds a full kitchen, a living area, and — the detail that really sets the Lucia apart — a dedicated home office with a built-in desk and integrated storage. In a moment when remote work has become a non-negotiable consideration for homebuyers at every scale, this is a meaningful design decision rather than a gesture. The space feels intentional, not squeezed in.

The bedroom lives in the loft, accessed by a staircase that earns its keep twice over — each step doubles as a storage nook or cupboard. The ceiling runs low up there, as loft ceilings do, but the double bed fits comfortably alongside additional built-in storage, and the proportions feel cozy rather than cramped.

The Lucia starts at $97,000, with the final number climbing depending on customization choices — a terrace and pergola add-on, furnishing packages, and color selections among them. For a modular home built to Scandinavian standards, using eco-friendly materials and designed by architects rather than assembled from a catalog, that entry price is competitive. What the Lucia ultimately offers isn’t a compromise on living — it’s an argument that thoughtful design at 39 square meters can outperform thoughtless design at twice the size.