Guest
A+


There is something disarming about arriving at a home that was once a shipping container. The Bluebonnet sits on a country property just twelve minutes from downtown, its corrugated steel exterior painted in a shade that nods to the Texas wildflower it is named for. The conversion is compact and deliberate, a tiny home that trades square footage for character, with every corner considered and every surface earning its place. A pickleball court on the grounds sets a playful, unhurried tone before you even step inside.
The interior is designed for two, with a layout that makes the most of its footprint. A comfortable sleeping area, a functional kitchenette, and a small living space come together in a single open plan that feels surprisingly warm despite the industrial origins of the structure. The finishes lean toward rustic modern, with clean lines softened by textured materials and natural light filtering through well-placed windows. Climate control keeps the space comfortable across seasons, and thoughtful touches throughout suggest a host who understands that small spaces demand greater attention to detail, not less.
Outside, the property opens up considerably. The country setting offers breathing room that the container itself does not, with outdoor seating areas where mornings stretch out and evenings slow down. The pickleball court is a genuine draw, a rare amenity for a rental of this size that invites guests to step away from screens and into something physical and fun. The surrounding landscape is open and uncomplicated, the kind of flat, green Texas terrain that feels honest and unadorned.
The Bluebonnet is not a property that tries to be something it is not. It is a container home, compact and unconventional, set on a quiet piece of land with easy access to downtown. What it offers is a stay that feels distinct from the predictable rhythms of hotel rooms and conventional rentals. You sleep in a structure with an unexpected origin story, wake to open country air, and spend your days moving between the intimacy of a tiny home and the wide simplicity of the land around it. It is a stay measured not in amenities but in the quiet pleasure of something genuinely different.
There is something disarming about arriving at a home that was once a shipping container. The Bluebonnet sits on a country property just twelve minutes from downtown, its corrugated steel exterior painted in a shade that nods to the Texas wildflower it is named for. The conversion is compact and deliberate, a tiny home that trades square footage for character, with every corner considered and every surface earning its place. A pickleball court on the grounds sets a playful, unhurried tone before you even step inside.
The interior is designed for two, with a layout that makes the most of its footprint. A comfortable sleeping area, a functional kitchenette, and a small living space come together in a single open plan that feels surprisingly warm despite the industrial origins of the structure. The finishes lean toward rustic modern, with clean lines softened by textured materials and natural light filtering through well-placed windows. Climate control keeps the space comfortable across seasons, and thoughtful touches throughout suggest a host who understands that small spaces demand greater attention to detail, not less.
Outside, the property opens up considerably. The country setting offers breathing room that the container itself does not, with outdoor seating areas where mornings stretch out and evenings slow down. The pickleball court is a genuine draw, a rare amenity for a rental of this size that invites guests to step away from screens and into something physical and fun. The surrounding landscape is open and uncomplicated, the kind of flat, green Texas terrain that feels honest and unadorned.

There's a specific kind of satisfaction in a space that knows exactly what it is — and the Bluebonnet is that kind of place. A single shipping container, twenty feet of it, reimagined with pine shiplap and knotty alder and the quiet confidence of someone who genuinely cared about every square inch. It doesn't try to feel bigger than it is; instead, it leans into the constraint, and that's what makes it interesting. The Murphy bed folds away and suddenly the whole room reshapes itself — kitchen, dining, breathing room. But the detail that lingers is the rooftop deck, its LED rail lights shifting color overhead, turning a compact footprint into something unexpectedly expansive. It's a stay that rewards the kind of traveler who finds more personality in a well-considered container than in a thousand generic suites.
Guest
A+
Guest
Always love staying here and will definitely be back again!!
Guest
Loved the balcony and pickleball court! And the Waco waffle Co you can walk to it!
Guest
Perfect escape from the Waco crowds during the busy weekends of campus events. We will be back!
Guest
Tiny house had everything you needed and th balcony on top was perfect for evening star gazing.
Get notified when this stay runs special offers or becomes available during your preferred travel dates. We'll also connect you to the property so you can be eligible for insider rewards and premium experiences.
Follow *Pickelball* The Bluebonnet-Container Home!
Follow our social media to gain instant access to all things *Pickelball* The Bluebonnet-Container Home!: discounts, photos, updates and giveaways!
From Instagram