Furniture giant IKEA is joining the sustainability bandwagon with its Tiny Home Project – a 187-square foot, off-grid home on wheels that is “stylish, sustainable, and affordable.”
The company designed and built the tiny home in cooperation with brand studio Vox Creative after being inspired by their “shared commitments to sustainability, inclusivity and innovation.”

source: Josiah and Steph Photography
Their goal is to prove that anyone can live a more sustainable life anywhere.
“We built a sustainable tiny home from the ground up to better educate and inspire consumers to bring sustainability into their own lives,” according to the project’s website.
IKEA partnered with ESCAPE, an RV and tiny home builder, to create a custom build of the brand’s Vista Boho XL model. With low-impact design as its focus, the dwelling was fitted with solar panels, a composting toilet, and an RV water heater for off-grid capability.

source: Josiah and Steph Photography
“It was a natural pairing,” ESCAPE founder Dan Dobrowolski said.
“We feature many IKEA products in our various tiny home designs around the country as they mirror the renewable, reusable, and recycled materials we incorporate into the actual structures.”
ESCAPE spent about 60 days going through all the items IKEA wanted to include in the home. The whole project took about four months to complete, including the time spent building the base Vista Boho XL model.

source: Josiah and Steph Photography
Abbey Stark, the senior interior design leader of IKEA, showcased the company’s sustainable, multifunctional, and energy-efficient products in the home’s interior.
“How I started was really listing out all the needs for the space,” she said in an Explainer Studio video.
“Like, how do you design around a wheel well and the mechanics of the home? I wanted to source renewable, reusable, and recycled materials when possible to make the space functional as well as beautiful.”
The tiny home’s interior is lined with sustainably grown pine painted white to give the dwelling a more spacious feel.

source: Josiah and Steph Photography
Stark thought that including multifunctional furniture in the home was essential, so she littered the space with them.
One example is the NORDEN gateleg table placed at the center of the structure, which doubles as a workspace and dining table with built-in storage. It can also be folded down when not in use.
The kitchen features a solid wood and veneer SKOGSA countertop made with the whole tree—including the branches and twigs—which means there was less waste involved in making it. The cupboards are made with recycled bottle tops.

source: Josiah and Steph Photography
Beside the kitchen is the bathroom furnished with a VILTO towel stand made from 100% renewable materials, a low-flow HAMNSKÄR faucet, and NORDRANA hanging storage crochet crafted by Vietnamese artisans under fair-trade conditions.
The walk-in shower is equipped with a water-saving BROGRUND thermostatic shower head.

source: Josiah and Steph Photography
The bed has storage underneath.

source: Josiah and Steph Photography
The team started working on the Tiny Home Project in late 2019 and concluded in April 2020. IKEA had initially planned to take the tiny home on a nationwide tour across various sustainable events in the U.S. to let people explore the space. However, they had to change plans when the coronavirus pandemic struck.
In place of an actual physical tour, IKEA and Vox Creative—together with Curbed—launched a digital campaign offering an in-depth virtual walkthrough of the structure.
Aside from showcasing the home’s exterior and interior, the tour also provided viewers tips on how they can make their own homes—whether tiny or normal-sized—more environmentally friendly.

source: Josiah and Steph Photography
ESCAPE is accepting orders for the IKEA BOHO XL models—excluding IKEA furnishings—starting at $47,550. Additional options are available.
Click HERE to take a virtual tour inside Ikea’s sustainable tiny home.
What do you think of the home? Let us know in the comments!
Sunday 15th of January 2023
In light of Ikea’s recent decision to cut sick pay benefits for those who foolishly opted out of the worldwide Covid19 vaccination, I applaud them for caring about the health and welfare of their responsible employees and customers.
Donald
Saturday 15th of January 2022
In light of Ikea's recent decision to cut sick pay benefits for those who wisely opted out of the worldwide Vax experiment with an unapproved concoction of poison, I wouldn't buy a stick of gum from this trash company. I hope they go down in flames like so many others are. Fuck Ikea.
Gillian Coombe
Wednesday 12th of January 2022
I didn't see a washing machine anywhere, I would say that is just as, if not more, essential than a frige.