This isn't a "Tiny House" in the sense that people usually mean. It's small, but much too large to be built on a highway legal trailer. It's both to wide and way too tall.
Not a tiny house but pretty small and cute!
I've been wanting to build a tiny house in a trailer myself. I have the 3D layout/general idea of where to put stuff so it works in a tiny space, but that's about it so far. I don't even have the trailer yet or any idea where to park it once I get it, and I know it will probably take months if not years to properly rebuild. But I'm a broke student who's tired of paying so much in rent and a tiny house is my only hope right now of having a comfortable place to call my own, so I'd really like to go for it.
I wish you the best of luck. If you have experience in construction that will help a lot. You may want to try to find someone with experience to run your plans through too--same isn't the only concern you need to have. If you live somewhere cold than making sure your pipes aren't going to freeze is important, for example. Most people who love in apartments rarely have to worry about the pipes freezing, but it's a much bigger problem in tiny houses. Knowing where to park your house is also important-and even more consideration needs to go into it if you plan on moving your house around. (Weight, height, eaves, and tile are all effected)
Thank you! I don't have experience in construction but I know some people who do (specifically my dad's friends). Basically I'm just coming up with crazy ideas and hoping some of them will stick and be actually doable irl. For example I'd like the house to be (almost) off-grid (because I'll still need the internet) and so I'd like it to be powered by solar and collect rainwater (I live in Central Europe so I think that's feasible here). For the pipes I thought I'd have a separate solar powered heater that'd run on its own circuit and be on all the time (during winter anyway, or maybe have a temperature sensor or something). And also as an energy-saving measure I thought I'd have a "fridge" in the ground I'd pull up through a closeable hole in the floor. My dad and his friends are skeptical about that tho lol
The only way to have a fridge under your house would be if you built it up higher than needed on top of the trailer, which will cut I to head space if you need ot to be transportable at all. I don't know the laws in Europe, so you will need to do research about maximum trailer height and width. And remember anything on the side of your house counts as width for legal purposes.
I've been wanting to build a tiny house in a trailer myself. I have the 3D layout/general idea of where to put stuff so it works in a tiny space, but that's about it so far. I don't even have the trailer yet or any idea where to park it once I get it, and I know it will probably take months if not years to properly rebuild. But I'm a broke student who's tired of paying so much in rent and a tiny house is my only hope right now of having a comfortable place to call my own, so I'd really like to go for it.