It is w-a-y too small to be a sailboat...
Once centercockpit layouts became popular, builders tried to ratchet down the hull size while maintaining the 'advantages' of such a layout. By both traditional & contemporary standards, silly designs like the Irwin 32.5 and S2 30 were put in the market because, back then just like today, the dirty little truth is that many sailboats are used more as condos than for routinely sailing some distance under sail. If that's your own intention, which is certainly a reasonable choice, then look at the ergonomics of the layout as Edward is suggesting and don't worry about it being a condo more than a sailboat.OTOH if you are hoping to use the boat as a boat, you'll find this choice is loaded with compromises: wetter cockpit (closer to the bow wave), cramped accommodations with awkward arrangements for use underway, high CG, high CE, higher elevation for the crew in the cockpit with increased tendency for motion sickness (boats roll many more degrees than they pitch, and the acceleration forces of that higher arc will be noticeable relative to a lower, aft cockpit), poor cockpit locker storage (which already is in short supply on a smaller boat), and so on. The conventional 'Euro Quarter Cabin' layout is far more functional and works well down to ~32'/9.5M. Look e.g. at the layouts of a H-R 31 or Najad 330 to see what I mean. There are some wonderful older Contests with this option, as well. A Moody 31 is another great example, and very functional from the marina berth to offshore. Lots of choices without going 'up'.BTW the trend I see is that most boat builders have moved away from the c/c layout except in the big hulls, and the quarter aft cabin is now and has been the standard for some time, not that there aren't exceptions to that.Jack