Escape’s Shoreline Is a Tiny Home That Doesn’t Ask You to Compromise

Most tiny homes make you work for it. The Shoreline doesn’t. Escape’s Shoreline sits firmly on that side of the line. Permanently installed at the builder’s own Canoe Bay Village community in Wisconsin, it’s a non-towable park model that measures 47 feet long and a generous 17 feet wide — nearly double the standard tiny house width. That extra real estate changes everything about how the space feels.

The exterior reads like a Scandinavian chalet that wandered into the Wisconsin woods. Timber cladding, a metal roof, and a screened front porch give it a grounded, architectural presence rather than the prefab anonymity of most park models. Step through the double glass doors and the interior opens up into something that genuinely competes with a modest apartment — wood walls, wood floors, and a layout that keeps everything on one level.

Designer: Escape

The living room is the first thing that earns its keep. A full sofa, a coffee table, an entertainment center, and an electric fireplace fill the space comfortably, while a mini-split unit and ceiling fan handle the temperature. Large windows push natural light deep into the interior, making the room feel bigger than the square footage suggests. The kitchen sits just beyond — and this is where Escape earns real points. A four-burner propane cooktop, an oven, a microwave, a fridge/freezer, a dishwasher, a pull-out pantry, and a dining table make it a kitchen you’d actually cook in. Dishwashers in tiny homes are rare. This one has one.

The bathroom continues the pattern of refusing to underprovide. There’s a bathtub and shower — another genuine rarity at this scale — alongside a vanity sink with stone countertop, a flushing toilet, and a washer/dryer stacked neatly into the space. The bedroom, reached from the kitchen through a wooden door, holds a king-sized bed, built-in wardrobes, a closet, a TV, and a picture window that frames the outdoors like a painting.

The Shoreline is priced at $199,360. Buyers own the home and pay $680 per month for the plot and services at Canoe Bay Village. It’s not cheap, but for a single-level home built with this much care and this much genuine liveability, the math holds up. Escape has been building tiny homes for over 30 years, and the Shoreline shows exactly what that experience looks like when the brief is comfort without compromise.