
Tiny home living has a reputation it hasn’t quite shaken — that at some point, you’re trading a real life for a smaller one. The Burleigh 9.6 by Removed Tiny Homes isn’t that. Built by the Gold Coast, Australia–based maker as a fully custom project, this 9.6-meter (31.5 ft) home on wheels sits at the intersection of real architecture and everyday livability, and it does it without making you feel like you gave something up to get there.
From the outside, it reads differently from most tiny homes. The angular, stepped roofline and wraparound NewTechWood composite cladding give it a presence — something that looks designed rather than assembled. Double glass doors open onto a living room wrapped in picture windows, where a sofa, swivel-mounted TV, and ceiling fan create a space that genuinely invites you to sit down. The surrounding bush pulls straight through the glass, and because the whole room is bathed in natural light, the sense of space stretches well past the actual square footage.
Designer: Removed Tiny Homes
The kitchen runs galley-style through the center of the home — stone benchtops, a gas cooktop, an oven, a full-height fridge-freezer, and a lineup of SMEG appliances that would feel right at home in a full-sized apartment. A serving window opens to the outside deck, and a drop-down counter extension gives extra prep space when you need it. The interior palette is pure Japandi: light oak cabinetry, white VJ walls, matte-black hardware. Calm, warm, and considered.
The bathroom is where the Burleigh genuinely surprises. Most tiny homes fight to fit a single basin. This one carries a full double vanity — two round vessel sinks side by side on a white stone top, with twin black wall-mounted taps and a backlit mirror. Beside it, a glass-enclosed double shower runs two separate shower heads. A built-in washer-dryer and a louvred window round it out, making the bathroom feel residential rather than a scaled-down afterthought.
Sleep arrangements are split across two levels. The master bedroom sits at the far end of the home, accessed through the bathroom, with a double bed, a ceiling fan, full headroom, and its own separate entrance to the outside. A loft bedroom above the kitchen, reached by a removable ladder, offers a second double bed with the privacy of real separation. Power runs through a roof-mounted solar setup.
The Burleigh 9.6 is a custom build — designed and quoted individually through Removed’s custom program. It’s the kind of home that makes the case not just for living smaller, but for living better.