
The tent industry has spent decades obsessing over sleeping quarters. We’ve seen ultralight backpacking shelters, geodesic domes rated for basecamp conditions, glamping canvas suites with chandelier hooks and welcome mats. And yet somehow, the bathroom question, the single most pressing daily concern at any campsite, has largely been left to your imagination, a folding shovel, and a lot of prayers for tree coverage. Gazelle Tents has just changed that, and it did so in a way that feels almost embarrassingly obvious in hindsight.
The Privacy Tent is Gazelle’s answer to what I’d call the campsite gap. It functions as a portable shower enclosure, a changing room, or a toilet privacy shelter, and it sets up in about 90 seconds. That last part matters more than it sounds. Nobody wants to spend 20 minutes wrestling with poles and stakes before handling a biological situation. The fact that Gazelle uses its signature pre-assembled hub-frame system here, the same one it’s built its reputation on for regular camping tents, means you’re pulling something out of a bag, releasing it, and watching it pop into shape almost immediately.
Designer: Gazelle

The specs are genuinely good. Standing height clears 86 inches, which means even the tallest people in your group won’t be hunched over trying to get dressed. The footprint is 48 by 48 inches, which is roomy enough to actually move around inside without the kind of claustrophobic side-wall contact that turns a quick shower into an ordeal. When you’re done, the whole thing packs down to 48 by 8.5 inches in diameter, so it slides into the back of a car, a truck bed, or the corner of an overland rig without demanding much real estate.

Inside, Gazelle thought through the details in ways that suggest they actually talked to people who camp regularly. There are dual hose ports and a drawstring sprayer holder for portable shower systems, an overhead gear loft, and mesh plus TPU pockets for toiletries and clothes. The fabric is 2,000mm waterproof 210D Oxford polyester, and mesh near the floor handles drainage and cleaning. You can leave the top open for ventilation on warm days, or close it off with a rainfly when the weather turns. Eight all-terrain stakes come included. The price sits at $279.99, a promotional launch price off the regular $379.99.


Is that expensive? Depends on how you camp. If you’re the kind of person who drives four hours to a dispersed site, stays five days, and considers a cold outdoor shower one of the better parts of the trip, then $280 for a genuinely thoughtful piece of kit makes complete sense. If you’re a two-night campground person with access to the facilities block, it’s probably more than you need. But for the growing number of overlanders, van-lifers, and weekend warriors who’ve committed to going further off-grid, this fills a real gap.

The overlanding and car camping space has exploded over the last few years. Gear has gotten smarter, setups have gotten more elaborate, and people have clearly decided that roughing it doesn’t have to mean suffering through the basics. A privacy shelter might not be as exciting to buy as a rooftop tent or a solar generator, but it’s the kind of thing that changes the actual texture of a trip. Getting changed in the open while strangers walk by, or figuring out a portable toilet situation without any coverage, is the stuff that makes some people swear off camping entirely.

The fact that Gazelle applied serious engineering to something this unglamorous is, to me, the most compelling thing about the Privacy Tent. Good design isn’t always about the product that gets photographed beautifully on a mountaintop at sunrise. Sometimes it’s about the one that solves the problem nobody wants to bring up at the gear store. Gazelle’s version does exactly that, quietly, quickly, and apparently in under two minutes flat.

The post Gazelle Finally Built the Privacy Shelter Every Camper Wished Existed first appeared on Yanko Design.