Recently, the growing trend in apartment design is maximalism. Countries such as Japan and China have made incredible efforts to apply these ideas to a small residential or working area, since the number of their urban population is growing year by year with great speed. Never before have they encountered such problems.
Many other places around the world followed the example of Asian countries in the hope of becoming more efficient and practical and not wasting valuable resources and space.
Today on our site we will talk about an apartment that is in Paris. Urban residents, of course, were inspired by the eastern idea of functional planning of apartments, as in Paris, too, it is necessary to solve the problems of small-sized living space.
The Red Nest room (or red nest) was created by the French designer Paul Coudamy. This room is an example of a solution that at first seemed absolutely impossible: it was necessary to place a bedroom, study and bathroom on 23 square meters.
You, probably, at once will tell, that it is not real, but we will convince you, that this idea can quite be embodied in life. An unusual transformable sleeper can be an ideal solution in a house with a lack of space.
A stylish modular interior solution of the apartment is a huge sliding bookcase, which can be easily maneuvered. On the one hand, he hides the bed and the dressing room, and on the other - the hall and working space.
The red sliding wall block was created maximally functional: it combines a desk, a closet and a clamshell, and in such a small space all this is maximally available. The youth style of this space-saving furniture complex with its intense glossy red paint layer and the function of movement is the dream of any student living in a small demountable apartment or hostel.
The problem of the size of space is also solved using tricks with illusion, such as the use of mirrors. Two mirrors in the sleeping room are used to divide the room and create a feeling of visually extended space.
Overall, this red-and-white apartment seems to be a great place to live and work without any damage to style or functionality.
Would you like to arrange a small apartment in this way?