Yanko Design

This Skyscraper-Style Tiny Home Packs Two Floors Into Just 107 Square Feet

Most tiny homes go wide. La Ruche goes up. Designed by Quadrapol, the French company behind some of Europe’s most refined compact living solutions, La Ruche is a vertical two-story tower that fits a full kitchen, bathroom, dining area, and bedroom into just 10 square meters of total floor space. At 107 square feet, it is exceptionally small — even by the standards of a category that has made minimalism its identity.

The name translates to “The Hive” in French, and the form earns it. The structure rises to 4.12 meters tall on a footprint of just 2.17 by 2.3 meters. Built on a KVH finger-jointed solid wood timber frame, the exterior is clad in FSC and PEFC-certified treated pine siding available in a choice of colors, with a roof finished in either EPDM or steel pan. Quadrapol guarantees the structural frame for 20 years, and a 10-year warranty covers the broader build. This is not a weekend shed project. It is a precision-manufactured habitat delivered by truck, ready to drop into a back garden, campsite, or vacation lot without requiring any planning permit or administrative authorization.

Designer: Quadrapol

Step through the single glass door and you arrive in the kitchen, which is smaller than most studio apartment bathrooms but remarkably well-equipped. There is a two-burner induction hob, a built-in fridge, a sink, and cabinetry. A wall-mounted drop-down table unfolds to seat two. Separated from the kitchen by a curtain, the ground floor bathroom contains a 70 by 70 centimeter shower and a floor-mounted toilet. The spruce paneling and laminate flooring run throughout, keeping the interior palette tight and coherent.

A wooden ladder leads to the upper level, designed to stow flush against the wall when not in use. Up top, the bedroom fits a double bed alongside a storage unit and a netted shelf. It is snug in the way only intentional design can pull off — the kind of snug that feels considered rather than cramped, at least for a weekend or seasonal stay. Quadrapol positions it for permanent housing, second homes, vacation rentals, and student accommodation, though the curtain-divided bathroom and ladder access suggest it is best suited to shorter-term use or solo living.

La Ruche is priced at approximately $31,000 USD. With delivery running two to three months, it sits in a price bracket that makes it a genuinely accessible entry into compact ownership. For those willing to rethink what a home needs to be, Quadrapol’s answer is simple: four meters tall, two floors, and not a centimeter wasted.

Exit mobile version