Further inside, Ava carved out the spaces that matter most when a house is also your retreat. The bedroom sits at the quieter end of the container, separated just enough from the main living space to feel private without making the home feel chopped up. She built the bed onto a raised platform with drawers hidden underneath, turning what could have been dead space into serious storage. Crisp white bedding, a textured throw, and a slim wall sconce give the room a hotel-like calm, while one carefully placed window frames a view of the trees outside. In the morning, that window is the first thing she sees.
The bathroom might be the most surprising room of all. People tend to assume tiny bathrooms feel like an afterthought, but Ava treated hers like a design challenge worth getting exactly right. She chose a walk-in shower with a glass divider, which keeps the room visually open, and lined one wall with soft stone-look tiles that make the space feel more luxurious than its footprint suggests. A floating vanity, round mirror, and warm brass fittings add just enough character without overwhelming the room. There is even a narrow niche built into the shower wall for soaps and folded towels.
Ava says the real trick was not trying to fit a normal house into a container. It was accepting the shape of the structure and designing around it. That is why the bedroom feels restful and not squeezed, and why the bathroom feels polished instead of improvised. Every corner seems to say that in the right hands, even a small but well-designed space can feel deliberate, calm, and unexpectedly beautiful.