Two-story, 1 Bed, 1 Bath, 245 sq. ft. Tiny Modern Cabin Floor Plans: The Tiny Triangle Triumph

Last updated on April 17, 2026 · How we make our floor plans

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The Tiny Triangle Triumph Floor Plan

This design is a compact two-story tiny house with a loft, shaped for efficient living and a clean modern look.

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The Tiny Triangle Triumph Top View

The facade is crisp and contemporary. Vertical wood siding is paired with corrugated metal cladding for a smart contrast. Warm trim around the windows and entry adds a softer note. The roof reads as a sharp angular metal form with tidy overhangs. Small house, strong posture.

These are floor plan drafts prepared for review and planning. They are also available for download as a printable PDF. Convenient, because paper is still very good at being paper.

  • Total area: 238 sq ft
  • Bedrooms: 1
  • Bathrooms: 1
  • Floors: 2

Main Floor

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Main Floor

Download Floor PDF

The main floor is the primary living level, with 169 sq ft overall. The layout is compact and square. The living area and kitchen occupy most of the plan. The utility and bath are grouped into the service corner near the stair. A patio extends off the main level for a simple outdoor bonus.

  • Living Area: 65 sq ft
  • Kitchen: 60 sq ft
  • Utility (Utl): 12 sq ft
  • Bath: 21 sq ft
  • Patio: area not specified

Loft

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Loft

Download Floor PDF

The loft is the upper sleeping level, with 69 sq ft overall. Stairs arrive at a small landing. Part of the floor is open to below, which helps the interior feel less pinched and more playful. The bedroom takes the enclosed side of the loft.

  • Bedroom: 77 sq ft
  • Open to below: area not specified

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We have more facade options of this design:

Blue and Light Grey Siding

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house siding blue and light grey

The big change is the siding: one face is now wrapped in rich blue horizontal boards, while the other switches to light grey ribbed metal, giving the facade a crisp split personality—in a good way. That two-tone move makes the angular form feel sharper, especially where the warm timber trim slices down the center like the house is showing off a clean little crease.

With the blue and light grey palette in place, the honey-toned window frames and glazed entry pop much more boldly, almost like the facade got dressed and actually picked accessories. The single-slope roof, slim overhangs, and offset window layout still keep the exterior modern and compact, but the new siding colors make it look brighter, neater, and a bit more cheeky.

White and Black Siding

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house siding white and black

The big change is the siding: one face is now crisp white, the other a deep black, and the whole facade suddenly has much more swagger. That two-tone split sharpens the tiny house’s angular form, making the sloped roofline and the dramatic diagonal front support look even bolder—like the facade put on a tux and kept one sneaker on.

The vertical cladding in both colors keeps the exterior clean and tall, while the warm wood-toned window and door frames pop harder against the new contrast.

The black side gives the upper and lower windows extra punch, and the white side keeps the entry bright and airy. Small house, loud facade.

Grey and Forest Green Siding

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house siding grey and forrest green

The big change is the new siding palette: soft grey on one face and forest green on the other, which makes the facade feel sharper and more sculptural right away. The grey horizontal cladding keeps the front calm and crisp, while the forest green ribbed panels add texture and a little woodland swagger.

That color split really boosts the house’s angular geometry, especially where the dramatic slanted frame slices between the two surfaces. With the warm wood window trim, deep roof overhang, and slim rectangular windows, the updated facade looks clean, modern, and just cheeky enough to know it looks good.

Yellow and Bronze Siding

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house siding yellow and bronze

The big change is the siding palette: one plane now glows in a soft yellow, while the other shifts to a rich bronze, giving the facade a sharper, more graphic split. It makes the folded front corner and steep asymmetrical roof feel even more sculptural—like the house put on a crisp little jacket.

That yellow-and-bronze combo also plays nicely with the slim horizontal windows, which stand out more cleanly against the revamped cladding. The narrow glazing by the entry, the deep roof overhangs, and the vertical siding lines all feel more deliberate now; tiny house, very smug facade.

White and Red Siding

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house siding white and red

The big change is the new white-and-red siding, and it completely rewires the facade. One side now wears crisp white horizontal boards, while the other flips to deep red vertical cladding, giving the front a sharp two-tone split that feels bold and a little cheeky.

That color swap makes the angled front frame and clean roofline pop much harder, almost like the house discovered contrast and got smug about it. The warm wood-trimmed windows and glass door sit neatly against both colors, tying the facade together while the red side adds texture and the white side keeps things fresh and tidy.

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The Tiny Triangle Triumph Floor Plan
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The Tiny Triangle Triumph Floor Plan

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