The second tiny house company at the Seattle Home Show was Seattle Tiny Homes, and this was a much more developed tiny house. The bathroom design included a regular shower-tub, a composting toilet and full-laundry amenities. The kitchen had a sink, a two-burner stove and an oven. The second loft, which I'm guessing is presumed to be for only if you have guests, is electric and lowers down out of the ceiling of the great room. I think that just wastes space instead of saving it because you can't have ANY storage of any kind up that end of the house with that feature in place. Things in tiny homes really have to be multi-purpose. That bed and the space it takes up is not.








