Monday, January 19, 2009

DOMESTIC TRANSORMER

Gary Chang, a Honk Kong architect lives in a tiny apartment but thanks to accordion -like wall units , he can create at least 24 different room configurations

Using shifting wall units suspended from steel tracks bolted into the ceiling, the apartment becomes all manner of spaces — kitchen, library, laundry room, dressing room, a lounge with a hammock, an enclosed dining area and a wet bar



The walls in the apartment's main room, awash in yellow because of tinted windows, are pushed against the wall to the left to create an open space, with CDs to the left and the desk to the right.


Beyond the CD wall is a washer-dryer nook and a wall for the TV.

A panel hides the nook, and the TV wall moves to reveal the kitchen.
Behind one movable wall of shelving is an extra-large Duravit bathtub. A glass shower stall doubles as a steamroom with color therapy and massage and a Toto toilet has a heated seat and remote control bidet. Sound emanates from a six-speaker home entertainment system
Mr. Chang uses a hydraulic Murphy bed of his own design, hidden behind a sofa during the day. (via nytimes)

No comments: