150 Best Tiny Interior Ideas
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About this ebook
From the 150 Best series, a gorgeous collection of inspiring design ideas for transforming tiny interiors into beautiful and inviting living spaces.
Over the past decade, tiny spaces have grown in popularity thanks to skyrocketing real estate costs, increased awareness of climate change, and a return to urban living. But a smaller living space doesn’t mean sacrificing sophistication or comfort. 150 Best Tiny Interior Ideas showcases the latest ideas of internationally renowned architects and designers who have devised beautiful, practical, and eco-friendly solutions adapted to the specific needs and tastes of their clients.
All of the projects featured in 150 Best Tiny Interior Ideas are under 1,100 square feet and show off the latest innovations in small space design from around the world. Discover how to live practically and beautifully in a 3D-printed concrete cabin in Ithaca, New York, a 240 square-foot aux box in Parksville, British Columbia, or a flat with a flexible layout in Hong Kong.
Packed with hundreds of full-color photographs, and covering current trends, 150 Best Tiny Interior Ideas is an essential resource for designers, interior decorators, architects, and students, as well as an inspirational sourcebook for homeowners and apartment dwellers interested in downsizing or who’ve made the move, offering ideas for maximizing space while creating warm and inviting homes.
Francesc Zamora
Francesc Zamora Mola works for Loft Publications, where he is the author of numerous architecture and interior design books, including 150 Best of the Best House Ideas and 150 Best Interior Design Ideas. Formerly an architect in San Francisco, he lives and works in Barcelona, Spain.
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150 Best Tiny Interior Ideas - Francesc Zamora
Introduction
High housing costs, a fast-paced lifestyle, and increasing environmental awareness are quickly fostering a trend that changes the priorities that define the spaces we occupy. For some dwellers, it is no longer a goal to have a multiroom house with a garage and yard. The desire for extra space falls back in the list of priorities. Instead, dwellers find functionality and convenience more appealing.
One of the most noticeable movements that have derived from these habit changes is the rise of micro-housing. There is an urgent need for solutions that promote affordable housing in cities. Micro-housing is not simply about tiny living spaces. Living small for the sake of reducing our physical living environments isn’t the point, and it is a gesture that would most likely be doomed to fail. Micro-housing, or reducing living environments to what some would consider tiny, is part of a larger system that favors increased social interaction; proximity to places such as work, school, shopping, and entertainment districts; and a sense of community and diversity.
But as some examples in the book show, the micro-housing trend is not unique to urban environments. Some are weekend retreats, off-grid cabins serving those in search of a little peace and quiet away from the noise of urban environments. This does not connote a living experience that is diminished or isolated. It is a lifestyle choice.
The demand for clever tiny spaces is motivating architects and designers to do more with less and capsize the misconception that tiny spaces are synonymous with cheap and lack of advantages. Reduce space doesn’t mean reduce style. This book shows plenty of examples.
Most tiny living quarters include built-ins throughout—in the living area, the kitchen, the bathroom, and the bedroom. Built-ins make the most of limited space and offer flexible use of space, adapting the area to different situations. Built-ins also free space up, making it feel less cramped in favor of fluid circulation and seamless flow among contiguous areas. Open plans incorporating different functions are space efficient and allow for flexible use of the space available. Ample doorways or openings allowing sight lines through a sequence of spaces add a sense of amplitude and space unfolding. A palette of light colors and materials contributes to a warm and inviting ambiance while visually amplifying spaces, making them feel larger. Good lighting—both natural and artificial—and reflective surfaces also make tiny spaces feel larger than they are.
While moving toward smaller, space-efficient, and affordable spaces is an appealing move, providing homes that feel like they are one’s private domain is critical. Tiny spaces don’t necessarily sacrifice style. They can be functional, flexible, comfortable, and just as inviting—but in a more cozy way—as their larger counterparts.
Tiny spaces are a creative motivation for new construction, renovations, conversion of existing large spaces into smaller, more space-efficient ones, and technological advances in prefabrication. Building and planning regulations also adapt to contemporary housing needs, trying to mitigate the shortage of affordable housing. ADUs, or Accessory Dwelling Units, are on the rise, serving as guest apartment, home office, or additional bedroom.
These situations create a wide array of design opportunities, sometimes going beyond the typical residential typology. Yacht design and garage conversions into in-law
/ADU units are some examples. They demonstrate that some spatial expectations can be forgone in favor of practicality, convenience, and proximity to vital commodities.
Pied-à-Mer
600 sq ft
Aboard a residential yacht
Michael K Chen Architecture // MKCA
© Alan Tansy
Playfully dubbed pied-à-mer,
this apartment aboard a residential yacht by Michael K. Chen Architecture (MKCA) is simultaneously adaptable, efficient, and strikingly elegant. The residence serves as a holiday home for a couple and their grown children, transforming seamlessly from a spacious one-bedroom to a two-bedroom apartment through tables and beds that fold away and unfurl as necessary. Drawing from Le Corbusier’s interest in streamlined, mid-twentieth-century steamship design, the space is also reflective of MKCA’s own expertise in creating compact, multifunctional spaces in contemporary urban environments.
As a jumping-off point for the project, MKCA looked to modernist architecture’s fascination with nautical design, which optimized for small-scale living, modular organization, and efficiency. In particular, Le Corbusier’s belief that a home should be regarded as a machine for living,
as well as his fascination with cruise ships as models for self-sufficient, utopian apartment complexes, like his famed 1952 Unité d’Habitation, offered inspiration.
Perspective floor plan
MKCA has included two bedrooms, two baths, a kitchen, a dressing room, a sitting area, a trunk room, and a landing zone. When needed, the dining area converts easily into the second bedroom, with the dining table tucking into the wall to make way for a sleek cantilevered fold-up bed. When converted into a two-bedroom space, a sliding screen divides the apartment, allowing privacy for guests. Two pod-like volumes, each containing private bath and storage areas, organize the apartment while retaining effortless movement through its common areas and from its front door to its broad, ocean-facing glass wall.
Contemporary pieces were mixed with several vintage items, in largely natural materials and rich, warm colors, as a counterpoint to the cool blue and gray, slightly machine aesthetic of the custom-fabricated elements.
The ship’s furnishings were specified in the spirit of collaboration, whether sourced from independent designers, commissioned or customized specifically for the project, or custom-designed by MKCA. Motion and a sense of spaciousness are further encouraged through light and reflection.
001
Multifunctional furniture can adapt to different living situations, allowing for the transformation of spaces. The furniture is not only technically sophisticated but also very stylish.
Continuous aluminum ribs help conceal panel divisions, doors, and appliances, and also accentuate a sensation of height in the relatively low, 8-foot-tall space. Finishes throughout the apartment are either impervious or designed to patina over time.
002
Rather than flooding surfaces with spotlights, try backlighting solutions to light up shelves, mirrors, artwork, and ceilings, for instance. Backlighting can add modern appeal to any space, from entry areas to bathrooms.
Concepts of motion and multifunctionalism underpin all aspects of the residence’s organization and aesthetic. In addition to disappearing tables and beds, MKCA has incorporated hidden lighting and integrated appliances that can be boldly revealed or neatly tucked away.
003
Pattern scale and color choices influence the way we perceive spaces. Small tiles and bright colors do make small spaces look larger. Also, small tiles are often preferred in bathrooms because there is less tile cutting involved around toilet seats, for instance.