The Burleigh 9.6 Is the Tiny Home That Proves You Don’t Have to Give Anything Up

Tiny home living has a reputation it hasn’t quite shaken — that at some point, you’re trading a real life for a smaller one. The Burleigh 9.6 by Removed Tiny Homes isn’t that. Built by the Gold Coast, Australia–based maker as a fully custom project, this 9.6-meter (31.5 ft) home on wheels sits at the intersection of real architecture and everyday livability, and it does it without making you feel like you gave something up to get there.

From the outside, it reads differently from most tiny homes. The angular, stepped roofline and wraparound NewTechWood composite cladding give it a presence — something that looks designed rather than assembled. Double glass doors open onto a living room wrapped in picture windows, where a sofa, swivel-mounted TV, and ceiling fan create a space that genuinely invites you to sit down. The surrounding bush pulls straight through the glass, and because the whole room is bathed in natural light, the sense of space stretches well past the actual square footage.

Designer: Removed Tiny Homes

The kitchen runs galley-style through the center of the home — stone benchtops, a gas cooktop, an oven, a full-height fridge-freezer, and a lineup of SMEG appliances that would feel right at home in a full-sized apartment. A serving window opens to the outside deck, and a drop-down counter extension gives extra prep space when you need it. The interior palette is pure Japandi: light oak cabinetry, white VJ walls, matte-black hardware. Calm, warm, and considered.

The bathroom is where the Burleigh genuinely surprises. Most tiny homes fight to fit a single basin. This one carries a full double vanity — two round vessel sinks side by side on a white stone top, with twin black wall-mounted taps and a backlit mirror. Beside it, a glass-enclosed double shower runs two separate shower heads. A built-in washer-dryer and a louvred window round it out, making the bathroom feel residential rather than a scaled-down afterthought.

Sleep arrangements are split across two levels. The master bedroom sits at the far end of the home, accessed through the bathroom, with a double bed, a ceiling fan, full headroom, and its own separate entrance to the outside. A loft bedroom above the kitchen, reached by a removable ladder, offers a second double bed with the privacy of real separation. Power runs through a roof-mounted solar setup.

The Burleigh 9.6 is a custom build — designed and quoted individually through Removed’s custom program. It’s the kind of home that makes the case not just for living smaller, but for living better.

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What the 700% DRAM Price Spike Means for Your Next PC Build

What the 700% DRAM Price Spike Means for Your Next PC Build Inside view of a custom gaming PC with high end RAM installed

A class-action antitrust lawsuit filed on June 25, 2026, targets Samsung, SK Hynix and Micron, companies that collectively control over 90% of the global DRAM market. The lawsuit accuses these firms of colluding to limit the supply of consumer-grade DRAM in favor of higher-margin AI-focused memory production. This alleged strategy has driven DRAM prices up […]

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Insta360 Luna Ultra Pocket Camera Faces Fierce New Rival Amid DJI Lawsuits

Insta360 Luna Ultra Pocket Camera Faces Fierce New Rival Amid DJI Lawsuits Insta360 Luna Ultra pocket camera with detachable screen

The Insta360 Luna Ultra has entered the spotlight with features like a detachable screen and advanced tracking technology, aiming to cater to the growing demands of content creators. However, its debut coincides with rising competition from the Akaso Brave 7 2 Pro and a legal dispute with DJI over alleged patent infringements. As TechAvid explains, […]

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A Camping Kit Actually Designed for Kids, Not Just Dragged Along

If you’ve ever taken kids camping, you know the scene: the tent is up, the fire is going, and the kids are on their phones. It’s not laziness and it’s not bad parenting. Most of the time, it’s a design failure. The gear around them was never built with them in mind, and at some point, that sends a message even kids can feel.

Camping equipment has always been an adult enterprise. The coolers are heavy, the tent poles are complicated, the chairs are sized for grown-up bodies, and the whole setup sends one unintentional message: wait here while we do the real stuff. Kids get handed snacks and a patch of ground while adults handle everything that looks interesting. At some point, a screen starts to feel like a more welcoming invitation than the campsite does.

Designer: Chenyu

That’s the gap designer Chenyu set out to close with KIDO!T, a modular outdoor adventure kit built specifically for children. And it’s worth paying attention to, not just as a clever product idea but as a genuine rethinking of how we design for younger people in outdoor spaces. The concept is straightforward: give kids their own gear to build and configure, and suddenly the campsite becomes theirs to shape. Ownership changes everything.

At the core of KIDO!T are inflatable bricks. Each one has a rubber inner air chamber for structure and a durable nylon outer layer, making them light enough for a toddler to carry but sturdy enough to actually sit on. What makes them click as a system, literally, is embedded magnetic sheeting that lets the bricks snap together intuitively. No instructions required. No adult supervision necessary. Children can build forts, lounges, exploration bases, or whatever their imagination lands on that afternoon.

The design was thought through with specific age groups in mind, and that kind of granular attention is where it gets genuinely interesting. For kids between three and five, the priority is sensory play and safety. Ages six through eight lean into curiosity and the desire to actually build things. Teenagers, who are often the forgotten middle ground in family gear design, get something that offers independence and a social space they can call their own. One kit, three different relationships with play. That kind of design intelligence is rare.

Chenyu describes the generation growing up today as living in a “forest of concrete,” and that framing sticks because it’s accurate. Between screens, structured academics, and urban environments, many kids are logging less and less time in genuinely unscripted outdoor spaces. Camping is often a family’s attempt to correct that, which makes it all the more frustrating when the experience doesn’t actually pull kids in. The intent is there. The gear just hasn’t caught up.

The activity modules bundled into the system take it further still. Rather than sitting passively while the adults make dinner, a child can plug into a structured activity that ties directly to the outdoor setting around them. It’s a quiet but meaningful shift in how we position nature to kids: not as a backdrop to adult activities, but as a destination in its own right.

KIDO!T earns its place in the conversation about modern outdoor design because it reframes the problem entirely. The question isn’t how to get kids to put their phones down. It’s how to make the alternative more compelling than anything a screen can offer. Inflatable bricks that snap together magnetically and become whatever a child imagines? That’s a stronger argument than any screen time limit.

Good design for children is a specific craft. It can’t just be adult design scaled down or made colorful. It has to understand how kids actually think, what motivates them, where their attention goes and why. KIDO!T feels like a response to that challenge rather than an afterthought to it. The campsite has always been beautiful. Now there might finally be a corner of it that belongs entirely to the kids.

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Why Xreal Aura’s $1,500 AR Glasses Are Ditching Traditional VR for Spatial Computing

Why Xreal Aura’s $1,500 AR Glasses Are Ditching Traditional VR for Spatial Computing User interacting with Android XR productivity apps using Xreal Aura hand tracking

The Xreal Aura represents a significant step forward in augmented reality, blending AR and VR capabilities into a sleek, glasses-style device. Designed with practicality in mind, it offers features like a 70° field of view and electrochromic dimming, which allows users to adjust lens transparency across five levels for optimal visibility in different lighting conditions. […]

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Meet Soul, Terra, and Luna: the GPT-5.6 Models Restricted to Trusted Organizations

Meet Soul, Terra, and Luna: the GPT-5.6 Models Restricted to Trusted Organizations Conceptual graphic showing a locked digital gateway representing restricted AI access.

OpenAI’s latest release, GPT-5.6 Sol, introduces three specialized models, Soul, Terra and Luna, each tailored to distinct use cases. From the cybersecurity-focused Soul to the cost-efficient Luna, these models showcase advancements in performance and efficiency, such as improved token utilization and real-time monitoring capabilities. However, as Universe of AI highlights, access to these systems is […]

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A Spiderweb-Shaped Home in Japan Has No Fixed Rooms and Adapts as the Family Grows

Spiders have been building radial webs for about 100 million years, spinning silk into a geometry that spreads weight around with an efficiency engineers spent centuries trying to copy. The web holds up because every strand pulls toward the center, so stress gets shared across the whole thing instead of piling up in one spot. Architecture has borrowed this trick before, from geodesic domes to tensile fabric roofs, but a regular family home almost never commits to the idea this literally. UID Architects looked at a spiderweb and saw a floor plan. In Fukuyama, Japan, they turned that into a house where a family of four actually lives.

The home is an octagonal timber structure turned 45 degrees across its sloping suburban plot, topped by a roof whose beams all converge on a glazed opening at the center. UID balanced the entire volume on four points and wrapped triangular openings around the edges to pull in light from every direction. Inside, the roughly 828 square feet stays open on purpose, skipping conventional rooms in favor of four rounded plywood boxes that guide you through the space like a corridor. The dining table sits right under the middle of the web, putting the family’s social life at the structural heart of the house. It is a home you read from the ceiling down.

Designer: UID Architects

Eight timber beams run up from the perimeter and meet at a small glazed oculus that drops daylight straight into the middle of the plan. Looking up, the whole thing reads as a literal web frozen in wood, every strand under tension and pulling toward the same hub. From outside it flips into something else entirely, a faceted metal cone that rises over the neighboring rooftops like a spinning top someone left on the street. That shift between the warm wooden interior and the cool metal shell makes the house feel bigger and stranger than its footprint suggests. You read it as a tent from the driveway and a cathedral once you walk in.

A sunken lounge with a round shag rug steps up to the raised dining level, so the open plan never collapses into one undifferentiated room. The four plywood boxes handle the rest of the organizing, standing low enough that the soaring ceiling flows over all of them without interruption. Their corners are rounded rather than sharp, a small move that softens the heavy plywood and keeps the place from feeling like a furniture warehouse. You move between these volumes the way you would wander through a small village, never quite walled in, never fully out in the open. The boxes suggest where to sit, cook, or gather without ever issuing an order.

There are almost no permanent interior walls, which means the family can reassign space as their lives shift instead of calling a contractor. A corner that works as a play area now can quietly become a study, then a home office, all inside the same shell. Most homes get designed for one stage of family life and then fight the people living in them for the next thirty years. UID dodged that trap by building rooms that are really just zones, defined by furniture and habit rather than drywall. It is a smart, patient way to think about a house someone plans to keep for decades.

Plywood usually gets buried under veneer the moment a budget allows, treated as the cheap stuff you hide. UID does the opposite, letting warm plywood climb from the floor all the way up into the ceiling so the wood becomes both the structure and the finish. The one exception is the kitchen, where a darker, redder cabinetry tone marks it as its own little district within the larger space. That single shift in wood gives the cooking zone an identity without breaking the calm consistency holding the rest of the home together. Everywhere else, the material repeats until the house feels carved from a single block.

Building a giant timber web in a neighborhood of beige boxes takes real nerve, and the renderings could easily have collapsed into a gimmick once construction started. They did not, mostly because the geometry earns its keep, handling light, ventilation, privacy, and circulation in one gesture rather than decorating over them. Japan has a long history of small homes that punch far above their square footage, from the metabolist experiments of the sixties to the tight urban houses we cover constantly, and this one sits comfortably in that lineage. UID built a house that should still make sense long after the kids have grown and moved out. I keep thinking about who gets to redraw their own floor plan just by moving the furniture.

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