Why Choose the CrossRoads Hampton
A destination trailer is a different kind of purchase than a travel trailer or fifth wheel. You’re not buying mobility — you’re buying a place to settle in. Here’s the honest case for the Hampton, tradeoffs included.
The case for the Hampton
- Real ceiling height. Most of the Hampton lineup gives you 8-foot floor-to-ceiling heights, and the loft models step up to 9 feet. That extra headroom is what separates a unit that feels like a home from one that feels like a camper.
- Light and airy interior. The coastal-inspired design philosophy keeps interiors bright and open — the kind of space you actually want to spend a season in, not just sleep in.
- Home-like finishes. Residential-style appliances and raised-panel cabinetry mean the kitchen and living areas read like a house, which matters a lot when you’re cooking and living here for weeks at a stretch.
- Built to sit outdoors. An enclosed underbelly, fiberglass roof, and full-length rain gutters are the features that help a unit survive long stationary stays exposed to weather.
- Layout variety. With rear-kitchen, front-kitchen-and-loft, and other configurations available, you can match the floorplan to how you’ll actually use the space.
The honest tradeoffs
A destination trailer is not for everyone, and we’d rather you go in clear-eyed:
- It’s not built to move often. At 40-plus feet, the Hampton is a tow-it-once-and-leave-it unit. If you want to chase destinations, this is the wrong category.
- Site requirements are real. You need a long, level pad and 50-amp electrical service. Many campsites and most driveways can’t accommodate it. Confirm your site before you commit.
- Towing takes a capable vehicle and care. Moving a unit this large is a deliberate job, not a casual hookup.
If you have the site, the utilities, and the intention to stay, the Hampton rewards you with a genuinely livable space. Motor Sportsland carries the line — reach out about current availability.
