Haven at loveseat scale is 67.75 inches wide: compact footprint, taller presence. The arms sit at 27.25 inches, the back at 35.5, and the overall depth is 42.25 inches. Exposed legs at five inches keep the frame from reading as too heavy. It's a sofa that looks comfortable before you sit down in it.
The Hybrid Deluxe mechanism opens in one lift. Back cushions come off first, then a single upward pull auto-folds the seat and back into the flat position. One step, manual. The sleep direction is out from the wall, so clearance matters. The source page doesn't list a depth-from-wall number for this configuration, so verify with your retailer before final placement.
The queen bed runs 58.75 inches wide by 80.75 inches long. The five-inch built-in mattress is cold-cured, high-density HR foam, CertiPUR certified, the same Daily Sleeper-rated construction across the Haven line. Seat depth at 23.5 inches is deeper than average for a loveseat frame, which is part of what makes Haven work better as a day-to-day seat than it might look on paper.
Frame is solid spruce, mortise-and-tenon joinery with birch plywood, FSC and PEFC certified, made in the EU. Over 100 fabrics and over 100 leathers available. Four to six weeks from order to delivery.
This is for the smaller room that still needs a real queen bed and wants a sofa that functions well between guest visits. If you prefer a lower-profile, track-arm look at the same bed size, the Hampton Queen Loveseat is the comparison: Hampton's Hybrid mechanism takes two steps instead of one, and the seat is 21.75 inches deep versus Haven's 23.5. The deeper seat and single-lift open are what you're paying for with Haven.