2 Bedroom
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do holiday park operators frequently specify 2-bedroom Eurodita cabins as their standard pitch configuration?
Two-bedroom cabins are a common holiday park specification because they accommodate 4-person family groups (the largest holiday let demographic by booking frequency) within a balanced footprint that suits typical park pitch dimensions. The 2-bedroom format generates higher per-night rental income than 1-bedroom units while remaining within site planning constraints and Caravan Sites Act dimensional limits. Dealers should advise operators to confirm pitch-specific dimensional limits with the park licence before order. See BS 3632 mobile log homes range for related context.
What kitchen, bathroom, and living-area layout options does Eurodita supply within the 2-bedroom residential range?
Eurodita's two-bedroom configurations include open-plan kitchen/living layouts and separated kitchen layouts, single-bathroom and en-suite bathroom configurations, and various bedroom proportion options. The dealer specifies wall positions, window and door positions, and service routing at order stage. Each layout is CNC-machined to the dealer's confirmed plan. Bespoke 2-bedroom variations run through Eurodita's standard 4 to 8 week production route. See private-label manufacturing for related context.
How does Eurodita document thermal performance for 2-bedroom residential cabins under England Building Regulations Part L?
Eurodita supplies thermal documentation per 2-bedroom order, prepared using the specified wall construction, insulation specification, and glazing area. The dealer's contractor or designer uses this documentation when submitting Building Regulations applications under Approved Document L. Thermal performance figures are subject to the insulation specification confirmed at quote stage. For Building Regs compliance, the dealer should confirm thermal targets with the local building control body before order. See certifications for related context.
How do dealers price 2-bedroom residential cabins against equivalent brick-built or modular alternatives in the same market segment?
Two-bedroom timber residential cabins typically compete on three vectors against brick-built or modular alternatives: build time (timber kits assemble in days versus months for brick), site disruption (flat-pack delivery minimises traffic and groundworks), and total cost (factory-machined timber is often lower than equivalent brick spec for the same floor area). Dealers communicating these vectors win against alternatives where time-to-occupation drives the customer's decision. See dealer resources for related context.
What customer segments most often drive 2-bedroom residential cabin sales for dealers?
Two-bedroom residential cabins serve four primary customer segments: couples with an occasional guest room, downsizing buyers transitioning from larger homes, multi-generational households where a separate compact dwelling provides independence, and holiday let investors targeting the 4-guest family demographic. Each segment values different specifications, so dealers benefit from segmenting their product positioning around end-use rather than presenting a single 2-bedroom variant. See dealer programme for related context.
