Inside a Microapartment: Design Solutions to Support Future Sustainable Lifestyles
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Changes in flat furnishings—many elements of everyday interior furnishing have become smaller due to technological progress, e.g., flatscreen television sets, laptop computers, e-book readers, music, and photographs stored in digital form [3].
- The popularity and development of the so-called sharing economy, which favorably align itself with the idea of residential microspaces [10].
- New forms of living such as ‘co-living’ where often the private space is minimalized and complemented with shared space [13]
1.1. Microflat—Definition
1.2. Literature Review
- People who spend a lot of time outside the home and believe that the city is an extension of their flat [10];
- Persons forced to change their place of residence because of a divorce [3];
- Senior citizens;
- Seasonal workers [16];
- People are inclined to limit the number of their possessions and to use the so-called sharing economy, e.g., they do not own cars but use car-sharing services [10].
1.3. Research Aim
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Materials
- S—floor area between 35 and 25 m2 (typical flats with a separate sleeping area);
- XS—floor area between 25 and 15 m2 (single-space flats);
- XXS—floor area lower than 15 m2 (extremely small units).
2.2. Methods
2.3. F—Functional Solutions
- F1—room count reduction—deciding not to section off certain functions, e.g., the lack of a dedicated dining room, no full kitchen (a solution for persons who eat outside the home));
- F2—room size-reduction—designing space with the minimum possible floor area, dictated by ergonomics or the size of furniture/appliances, which have to be installed in a given space, e.g., a bedroom designed as a bed-sized niche for sleeping;
- F3—circulation space reduction (circulation space is provided by parts of spaces with other functions, e.g., crossing from one space to another via a different space, no dedicated vestibule, hallway, etc.);
- F4—combining functions, multi-purpose rooms, with no wall divisions—one space can feature zones with different functions, e.g., combining a kitchen with a dining area, a kitchen with a dining area and living area, etc.
- F5—a single space that functions differently at different times—depending on furniture layout, partition setting, and interior rearrangement, can fulfill various functions (contrary to F4, here there is rearrangement, i.e., furniture is moved, hidden and retractable furniture is opened, etc.);
- F6—creating functional blocks (combining elements with similar functions into blocks and placing them nearby or together, to free up space).
2.4. P—Spatial Solutions
- P1—stacking functions—the use of a room’s height, introducing a mezzanine or additional story so as to add another function, e.g., a bedroom on a mezzanine, above a bathroom or kitchen;
- P2—not building walls—partitioning spaces using other means than walls, e.g., using furniture, stairs, an openwork screen, the space’s shape, a local widening/narrowing of space, a lowering of the ceiling, etc.;
- P3—vertical space use—for instance by using furniture that extends along with the entire height of a wall, the use of space under the stairs, the bed, etc. This solution differs from P1 in that functions are not stacked on top of each other (e.g., a bedroom above a bathroom), but merely occupy the space in the upper parts of walls for shelving, storage spaces, etc. or occupy the space under other interior furnishing elements (under the stairs, the bed, etc.);
- P4—simple plan geometry—interiors are designed to have simple floor plans, e.g., in the shape of a rectangle or square, without acute angles, corners, etc.
2.5. M—Furniture/Equipment Solutions
- M1—the design of retractable or hidable furniture—furniture whose elements can be hidden or that change their geometry;
- M2—using built-in furniture (furniture built into a wall or that form a partition between spaces themselves, e.g., kitchen furniture or built-in wardrobes);
- M3—the use of sliding doors or windows;
- M4—the design of movable walls that can change the shape of the space, or either combine or separate neighboring spaces.
2.6. O—Optical Solutions
- O1—using bright colors;
- O2—designing simple or hidden details and joints—retractable handles, knobs, simple connections between elements that produce an impression of visual calmness and order;
- O3—using smooth surfaces, a lack of patterns;
- O4—maximizing daylight—the best possible use of means of admitting daylight, not a space—e.g., by placing functions that require greater insolation near windows (in existing buildings), or the design of very large glazing and windows (in existing buildings adapted into microflats), the use of transparent partitions between spaces, etc.
- O5—the use of mirrors or reflective surfaces;
- O6—introducing openings in walls between spaces (so that we can see a different space while being in another).
3. Results
3.1. M.S
3.2. M.XS
3.3. M.XXS
4. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
M.S. MICROFLAT GROUP | |
M.S.1 Geneva Flat by Freaks Architects, Geneva, Switzerland, 2014 | |
This unit was designed for a single person and to enable sporadic accommodation for a second person and two children. Ancillary spaces (bathroom, toilet, wardrobe, and kitchen) were grouped into a single functional block that occupies around a third of the unit’s space, leaving the rest free. All the walls and the ceiling in the flat are white, and the floor was left darker. The glass wall that separates the bedroom from the kitchen does not block sunlight [32]. | |
M.S.2 Apartment C by SCHEMAA, Paris, France, 2014 | |
This unit is located in an attic space and has two levels. The lower level acts as a large multifunctional room with a kitchen and bathroom, while the upper level, whose floor-to-ceiling height is lower than the standard for the story, was used as a bedroom and wardrobe. The interior is bright and complemented with wooden furniture in a bright tone, small colorful elements (e.g., stools) act as accents [33]. | |
M.S.3 30 m2 Flat in Paris by Richard Guilbault, Paris, France, 2015 | |
This unit, intended for a couple, is the effect of remodeling a flat that previously featured four cramped spaces. After the design intervention, the living room takes up two-thirds of the space and receives light from all windows. The walls and furniture in the apartment are bright, and the floor is the color of natural wood [34]. | |
M.S.4 Casa Da Porteira, AF Arquitectos, Lisboa, Portugal, 2015 | |
This flat is located on the roof of a building from the 1960s. The small space was divided into two parts. The main space acts as a living room with a kitchen that can be sectioned off. Nearby, behind a furniture partition, on a platform, there is the bedroom [35] | |
M.S.5 Długi Lokal by Mili Młodzi Ludzie, Poznań, Poland, 2014 | |
This unit has been designed for a couple in the attic of a townhouse. This space has atypical dimensions—it is very long and narrows in the center, leading to a division into two functional sections—a day zone near the entrance and a bedroom zone on the other side (Figure A1) [36,37]. | |
M.S.6 100 m3 by MYCC, Madrid, Spain, 2012 | |
This Madrid unit, intended for one person, is located in an atypical space with a varied height and has access only to one roof window. Instead of a classical room division, it features a system of platforms and steps that define spaces with different functions and allow for free movement between them. The lack of walls between each of the apartment’s zones means that sunlight is not blocked by anything [38]. | |
M.S.7 29 SQM by Czerny Design, Wrocław, Poland, 2012 | |
This microflat makes use of the height of the space and sports a mezzanine that has a bedroom area. The space with a lower ceiling, underneath the mezzanine, houses a bathroom and the vestibule. The remaining part of the flat—the living room, kitchen, and dining room are all designed as an open space [39]. | |
M.S.8 Batipin Flat by Studio Wok, Milan, Italy, 2015 | |
This flat, intended for a couple and located in Milan, was designed so as to leave as much space as possible in the main room so that it can be used for various functions. The primary space has plyboard walls on two sides, in which there are beds, the doors to the bathroom and kitchen, cabinets, and utilities [40]. | |
M.S.9 Air B’n’P by Position Collective, Budapest, Hungary, 2015 | |
This single-space apartment was designed for a short-term lease for two persons. The only space sectioned off with walls is the bathroom, which is located beside the entrance. The remaining space acts as a living room with a bed. The central part of the flat consists of a multi-purpose piece of furniture from plyboard—it includes a bed, cabinets, and a portion of the kitchen counter and shelves. The visually delicate partition between the sleeping area and the dining and living area is an openwork mesh screen [41]. | |
M.S.10 Mieszkanie Piotra by Mili Młodzi Ludzie, Poznań, Poland, 2013 | |
This unit, located in the attic of a townhouse, was intended for a single person. The bed was placed on a mezzanine above the bathroom, and the remaining residential space remained an open living room with a kitchen. The entire flat is in white color and crossed by black lines. All furniture and appliances—a desk, a television set, the kitchen—are hidden behind white cabinet fronts [42]. | |
M.XS. MICROFLAT GROUP | |
M.XS.1 Biobombastic, elii, Madrid, Spain, 2015 | |
This unit was designed so as to create a multi-functional space, whose individual parts could be partitioned with movable walls if needed. The entire functional program was grouped on two neighboring walls (bathroom, kitchen, washing machine, foldable bed and table, entrance, wardrobes). The interior is white, and the semi-translucent material of the movable walls allows for light to seep through between the sectioned-off parts of the flat [43]. | |
M.XS.2 Studio Li, Anne Rolland Architecture, Paris, France, 2014 | |
This apartment is located in Paris’s historical section, in a seventeenth-century building. This space used to act as a kitchen for a flat located upstairs. Residential space for one person was designed by dividing it into zones using a multifunctional piece of furniture. Original elements such as the floor or brick wall reflect the interior’s historical character [44]. | |
M.XS.3 Mieszkanie na Tamce, Jakub Szczęsny, Warsaw, Poland, 2009 | |
This unit was designed for a divorced man who uses it as a place to meet with his son and, on occasion, as a weekend flat. The kitchen was designed in the form of a small niche in the central portion of the space. A movable wall allows for forming a place to eat or to completely enclose and hide the kitchen. In the bathroom, due to its small dimensions, there is only a toilet and sink, while the shower is atypically placed in the hallway. (Figure A2) [45,46] | |
M.XS.4 Microapartament Moabit, Paola Bagna & John Paul Coss, Berlin, Germany, 2015 | |
This unit was designed as ‘a box in a box’. The box in question is a minimally sized bathroom, whose external walls were used as fixtures for other functions (kitchen, wardrobes, a place to sleep), freeing up the space around it. The walls and ceilings in this interior are white, and the floor and furniture partitions that surround the bathroom are the color of natural wood [47]. | |
M.XS.5 Apartment Spectral, Raphael Bettilon & Dorval Bory, Paris, France, 2013 | |
This small unit, designed on an atypical, L-shaped plan, was designed to use a combination of natural and artificial light with different temperatures. Functional zoning in the unit was subjected to light-dependent needs—a room that requires bright light allowing for the proper reading of real-world color and a room that does not require such lighting. The height of the flat was used to design a mezzanine bedroom, and the space underneath was used as a bathroom [48]. | |
M.XS.6 Studio 18.9 m2, Konrad Urbanowicz, Wrocław, Poland, 2016 | |
This single-space apartment in a Wrocław townhouse was clearly divided into two functional strips—a strip of ancillary spaces beside the entrance, and an open residential daytime strop beside the window. The kitchen zone was partially sectioned off using a semi-transparent glass panel. The sleeping area is located on a mezzanine above the bathroom [49]. | |
M.XS.7 Apartment AB, AB Rogers, Design, London, United Kingdom, 2017 | |
This unit, designed for a student, has been divided into two parts. The entrance area features a grouping of ancillary spaces and a bed and storage space on a mezzanine above them. This freed up space in the remaining part of the unit. Bright colors predominate in the apartment—white and light wood—yet one of the walls was painted an intense red [50]. | |
M.XS.8 Sophia Apartment, BlackHaus, Cracow, Poland, 2017 | |
This flat is located in the attic of a townhouse and is designed for one person. The place under the steep roof was used as a mezzanine with a sleeping area, under which is a bathroom and small vestibule. The remaining part of the flat has an open plan [51]. | |
M.XS.9 Sato StudioKoti, Innovarch, Helsinki (Vantaa), Finland, 2017 | |
The flats by StudioKoti have significant height, which was used to arrange a bed on a mezzanine, while under it there is an entrance hall with a kitchen and bathroom. The flats also have large windows and balconies [52,53]. | |
M.XS.10 Hermes City Plaza Student Housing, Standard Studio, Rotterdam, The Netherlands, 2017 | |
These student units were designed in a former office building in Rotterdam’s downtown. Every student unit came fully furnished and has its own bathroom and kitchen. The considerable floor-to-ceiling height allowed for designing beds suspended from the ceiling. The bed can be reached by a set of stairs that doubles as a wardrobe and shelves [54] | |
M.XXS. MICROFLAT GROUP | |
M.XXS.1 Bien Vivre Dans, Julie Nabucet, Marc Baillargeon, Paris, France, 2011 | |
This unit was designed in a space that used to be a part of a larger flat and was previously used as a bathroom. The new residential space is intended for a student. It features a platform that zones the unit into a living and an ancillary area (a kitchen, bathroom, and wardrobe), while also serving as a space where the bed is hidden during the day [55]. | |
M.XXS.2 Romain, Paris Attic Studio, Paris, France, 2016 | |
This attic unit effectively uses space under a steep roof. Places too low to use act as storage spaces and wardrobes. Placing the kitchen on a platform has allowed for hiding the bed underneath it. The wall that separates the kitchen from the room is openwork and blocks neither the view nor access to light [56]. | |
M.XXS.3 Boulevard Malsherbes, Sylvie Cahen, Paris, France, 2006 | |
This unit has a highly atypical layout—the day area (which is a single space with a separate bathroom) has a double-height and features two mezzanines. One mezzanine has a bed, while the other is used for storage, and both can be accessed via a ladder. Simple built-in furniture was designed in this white interior [57]. | |
M.XXS.4 13 m2, Szymon Hanczar, Wrocław, Poland, 2014 | |
This unit makes use of space’s considerable height and offers a bed placed on a mezzanine. Underneath this mezzanine is a bathroom and kitchen. The remaining part of the unit, located closest to the window, is fully open and acts as a living room. Bright colors predominate in this unit (white and natural light wood), supplemented with black accents (ladder, chairs, bicycle on the wall) (Figure A3) [58,59]. | |
M.XXS.5 Apt. 911, Starter I, AP Szczepaniak, Wrocław, Poland, 2013 | |
This unit is located in a former University staff hotel. The entrance section features a grouping of ancillary spaces, while the kitchen is located in a recess in a wall. The remaining space of the unit is a multipurpose room with a folded bed. The interior was designed in bright colors (white and light wood), supplemented by a blue color accent on the walls and in kitchen furniture [60]. | |
M.XXS.6 Rue Lourmel, Sylvie Cahen, Paris, France, 2016 | |
This microunit acts as a weekend flat for two people. The lower level has an open day zone with a bathroom, while the mezzanine features a place to sleep. The furniture in this unit is primarily built-in. The color of the interior is predominantly white, except wooden floors [61]. | |
M.XXS.7 Rue Des Canettes, Sylvie Cahen, Paris, France, 2010 | |
This tiny attic flat with slanted roofs was designed for a female student. Space was divided more or less in half, with one side featuring a kitchen and bathroom in an enfilade, while the other has a living space with a bed. Visible wooden roof truss elements were painted white to blend into the white walls and interior furnishings [62]. | |
M.XXS.8 The Lux Pod, Studio Bednarski, London, United Kingdom, 2010 | |
This unit was designed with a short-term lease in mind. The entry zone features ancillary rooms—a bathroom, kitchen, and a small hall, with a place to sleep located above them. The remaining space acts as a living room. A movable kitchen counter doubles as a workstation. The dark floor contrasts with bright walls and furniture [63,64]. | |
M.XXS.9 Tiny Apartment in Paris, Kitoko Studio, Paris, France, 2014 | |
The space used to design the unit used to be a maid’s quarters. Space was redesigned to meet the needs of a temporary employee. It is a single space with a functional wall that features a bathroom, a bed, a table, wardrobes, and other essential elements. The interior color is predominantly white with grey accents [65]. | |
M.XXS.10 La Casa Piu Piccola di Italia, Marco Pierazzi, Rome, Italy, 2010 | |
This unit has two levels. The lower level features a living room with a kitchen, dining room, and bathroom, arranged in an enfilade. The upper level, which is accessed using stairs, features a bed. This space used to act as a main residential unit but now acts as a temporary living space. Bright furnishing elements (kitchen furniture, doors, stairs, table) contrast with original brick walls and a wooden ceiling [66]. |
FUNCTIONAL SOLUTIONS | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | F1 | F2 | F3 | F4 | F5 | F6 |
S (25–35 m2) | ||||||
M.S.1 | + | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room, bedroom) | + | |
M.S.2 | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room) | + | + | |
M.S.3 | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room) | + | ||
M.S.4 | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room) | |||
M.S.5 | + | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room) | ||
M.S.6 | + | + | + | |||
M.S.7 | + | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room) | + | |
M.S.8 | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room, bedroom) | + | + | |
M.S.9 | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room, bedroom) | |||
M.S.10 | + | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room) | ||
XS (15–25 m2) | ||||||
M.XS.1 | + | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room) | + | |
M.XS.2 | + | + (dining space, study) | ||||
M.XS.3 | + | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, study) (vestibule, shower) | + | + |
M.XS.4 | + | + | + | + | ||
M.XS.5 | + | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room) (bathroom, wardrobe) | ||
M.XS.6 | + | + | + | + (living room, dining space, workstation) | ||
M.XS.7 | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room) | + | ||
M.XS.8 | + | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room) | ||
M.XS.9 | + | + | + | + (kitchen, vestibule) | + | |
M.XS.10 | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space, living room) (bathroom, kitchen) | + | ||
XXS (<15 m2) | ||||||
M.XXS.1 | + | + | + | + (kitchen, dining space) (living room, bedroom, study) | + | |
M.XXS.2 | + | + | + | + (living room, bedroom, study, dining space) | + | |
M.XXS.3 | + | + | + (living room, dining space, kitchen) | |||
M.XXS.4 | + | + | + | + (kitchen, vestibule), (living room, wardrobe) | + | |
M.XXS.5 | + | + | + (living room, bedroom, kitchen, dining space) | + | ||
M.XXS.6 | + | + | + | + (living room, kitchen, dining space) | ||
M.XXS.7 | + | + | + | + (living room, bedroom) | + | |
M.XXS.8 | + | + | + | + (living room, dining space, kitchen) (vestibule, study) | + | |
M.XXS.9 | + | + | + | + (living room, dining space, kitchen, bedroom, wardrobe) | + | + |
M.XXS.10 | + | + | + | + (living room, dining space, kitchen) (bedroom, living room) | + |
SPATIAL SOLUTIONS | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
No. | P1 | P2 | P3 | P4 |
S (25–35 m2) | ||||
M.S.1 | + (glass) | + (space under the bed) | + | |
M.S.2 | + (bed and wardrobe on a mezzanine) | + (low openwork partitions) | + (space under the stairs) | + |
M.S.3 | + (space under the bed and the entire height of the wall) | + | ||
M.S.4 | + (wardrobe, stairs) | + | ||
M.S.5 | + (shape of the space) | + (space under the bed and the sloped roof) | ||
M.S.6 | + (numerous levels) | + (various levels) | + (numerous levels) | |
M.S.7 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | + (shape of the space) | + (space under the stairs) | + |
M.S.8 | + (space along the entire wall height) | + | ||
M.S.9 | + (openwork mesh) | + (space under the stairs) | + | |
M.S.10 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | + (space along the entire wall height) | + | |
XS (15–25 m2) | ||||
M.XS.1 | + | |||
M.XS.2 | + (level difference, furniture as partition) | + (space under the bed) | + | |
M.XS.3 | + (level difference, furniture as partition) | + (space under the bed) | + | |
M.XS.4 | + (shape of the space) | + | ||
M.XS.5 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | + (shape of the space, stairs) | + | |
M.XS.6 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | + (glass panel) | + | |
M.XS.7 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | + (shape of the space, furniture as partition) | + (space under the bed, under the stairs, above the bathroom) | + |
M.XS.8 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | + | ||
M.XS.9 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | + (openwork partition) | + (space under the stairs) | + |
M.XS.10 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | + (furniture as a partition) | + (space under the stairs) | + |
XXS (<15 m2) | ||||
M. XXS.1 | + (level difference, furniture as partition) | + (space under the kitchen) | ||
M.XXS.2 | + (level difference, furniture as partition) | + (space under the kitchen) | + | |
M.XXS.3 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | |||
M.XXS.4 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | + (shape of the space furniture as a partition) | + (bathroom, kitchen, wardrobe under the mezzanine) | + |
M.XXS.5 | ||||
M.XXS.6 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | |||
M.XXS.7 | + (openwork partition, furniture as partition) | |||
M.XXS.8 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | + (bathroom under the mezzanine) | ||
M.XXS.9 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | + (furniture as a partition) | + (an entire wall that can be vertically used for various elements) | + |
M.XXS.10 | + (bed on a mezzanine) | + (furniture as a partition) | + (bathroom and wardrobes under the stairs and mezzanine) | + |
FURNITURE AND INTERIOR DESIGN SOLUTIONS | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
No. | M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 |
S (25–35 m2) | ||||
M.S.1 | + (kitchen, wardrobes, bed) | |||
M.S.2 | + (table) | + (kitchen, cabinets) | ||
M.S.3 | + (kitchen, cabinets) | + (bathroom, bedroom) | ||
M.S.4 | + (kitchen) | + (terrace) | + | |
M.S.5 | + (kitchen, wardrobes) | |||
M.S.6 | + (kitchen) | |||
M.S.7 | + (kitchen, wardrobes) | |||
M.S.8 | + (couch, bed) | + (kitchen, wardrobes, beds) | + (kitchen, bathroom) | |
M.S.9 | + (bed, cabinets, kitchen) | + (bathroom) | ||
M.S.10 | + (kitchen, wardrobes, cabinets) | |||
XS (15–25 m2) | ||||
M.XS.1 | + (bed, table) | + (kitchen, wardrobes, bed) | + | |
M.XS.2 | + (kitchen, wardrobes) | + (bedroom, bathroom) | ||
M.XS.3 | + (table, kitchen counter) | + (kitchen) | + | |
M.XS.4 | + (kitchen, wardrobes) | + (bathroom) | ||
M.XS.5 | + (kitchen) | |||
M.XS.6 | + (kitchen) | |||
M.XS.7 | + (kitchen, wardrobes) | |||
M.XS.8 | + (kitchen) | |||
M.XS.9 | + (kitchen, cabinets) | + (bathroom) | ||
M.XS.10 | + (kitchen) | |||
XXS (<15 m2) | ||||
M.XXS.1 | + (couch, bed) | + (kitchen, cabinets) | + (bathroom) | |
M.XXS.2 | + (couch, bed, table) | + (kitchen, wardrobes) | + (bathroom) | |
M.XXS.3 | + (kitchen, wardrobes) | |||
M.XXS.4 | + (kitchen, wardrobes) | + (bathroom) | ||
M.XXS.5 | + (bed) | + (kitchen, wardrobes, bed) | ||
M.XXS.6 | + (table) | + (kitchen, wardrobes) | + (bathroom) | |
M.XXS.7 | + (kitchen) | |||
M.XXS.8 | + (table, kitchen counter) | + (kitchen, wardrobe) | ||
M.XXS.9 | + (stairs, table) | + (all furniture in the flat) | ||
M.XXS.10 | + (table, bed, couch) | + (furniture as a partition) | + (bathroom and wardrobes under the mezzanine and stairs) | + |
OPTICAL SOLUTIONS | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | O1 | O2 | O3 | O4 | O5 | O6 |
S (25–35 m2) | ||||||
M.S.1 | + | + | + | + | ||
M.S.2 | + | + | + | + | + | + (between the wardrobe and bedroom) |
M.S.3 | + | + | + | + | ||
M.S.4 | + | + | + | + | ||
M.S.5 | + | + | + | + (between the bathroom and bedroom) | ||
M.S.6 | + | + | + | + | + (between the bathroom and toilet, bedroom, kitchen) | |
M.S.7 | + | + | ||||
M.S.8 | + | + | + | + | ||
M.S.9 | + | + | + | + | + (between the bathroom and the room, the sleeping area in the living room—frosted glass) | |
M.S.10 | + | + | + | |||
XS (15–25 m2) | ||||||
M.XS.1 | + | + | + | + | ||
M.XS.2 | + | + | + (between the bedroom and the living room) | |||
M.XS.3 | + | + | + | + (between the bathroom and the bedroom) | ||
M.XS.4 | + | + | + | + | + | + (between the bathroom and the bedroom—opening in the mezzanine’s floor) |
M.XS.5 | + | + | + | + | ||
M.XS.6 | + | |||||
M.XS.7 | + | + | + | + | ||
M.XS.8 | + | + | ||||
M.XS.9 | + | + | + | |||
M.XS.10 | + | + | + | + | ||
XXS (<15 m2) | ||||||
M.XXS.1 | + | + | + | |||
M.XXS.2 | + | + | + | |||
M.XXS.3 | + | + | + | |||
M.XXS.4 | + | + | + | + | ||
M.XXS.5 | + | + | + | + | ||
M.XXS.6 | + | + | + | + | ||
M.XXS.7 | + | + | + | + | + (between the bathroom and kitchen, the kitchen and the living room) | |
M.XXS.8 | + | + | + | + | + | |
M.XXS.9 | + | + | + | |||
M.XXS.10 | + |
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No. | Name | Architect | Location | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|
M.S (25–35 m2) | ||||
M.S.1 | Geneva Flat | FREAKS architects | Geneva, CH | 2014 |
M.S.2 | Apartment C | SCHEMAA | Paris, FR | 2014 |
M.S.3 | 30 m2 flat in Paris | Richard Guilbault | Paris, FR | 2015 |
M.S.4 | Casa Da Porteira | AF Arquitectos | Lisboa, PT | 2015 |
M.S.5 | Długi Lokal | Mili Młodzi Ludzie | Poznań, PL | 2014 |
M.S.6 | 100 m3 | MYCC | Madrid, ES | 2012 |
M.S.7 | 29 SQM | Czerny Design | Wrocław, PL | 2012 |
M.S.8 | Batipin Flat | Studio Wok | Milano, IT | 2015 |
M.S.9 | Air B’n’P | POSITION Collective | Budapest, HU | 2015 |
M.S.10 | Mieszkanie Piotra | Mili Młodzi Ludzie | Poznań, PL | 2013 |
M.XS (15–25 m2) | ||||
M.XS.1 | Biombombastic | Elii | Madrid, ES | 2015 |
M.XS.2 | Studio Li | Anne Rolland Architecture | Paris, FR | 2014 |
M.XS.3 | Mieszkanie na Tamce | Jakub Szczęsny | Warsaw, PL | 2009 |
M.XS.4 | Microapartment Moabit | Paola Bagna, John Paul Coss | Berlin, DE | 2015 |
M.XS.5 | Apartment Spectral | Betillon, Dorval Bory | Paris, FR | 2013 |
M.XS.6 | Studio 18.9 m2 | Konrad Urbanowicz | Wrocław, PL | 2016 |
M.XS.7 | Apartment AB | AB Rogers Design | London, UK | 2017 |
M.XS.8 | Sophia Apartment | BlackHaus | Cracow, PL | 2017 |
M.XS.9 | Sato StudioKoti | Innovarch | Helsinki (Vantaa) FI | 2017 |
M.XS.10 | Hermes City Plaza Student Housing | Standard Studio | Rotterdam, NL | 2017 |
M.XXS (<15 m2) | ||||
M.XXS.1 | Bien Vivre Dans | Julie Nabucet, Marc Baillargeon | Paris, FR | 2011 |
M.XXS.2 | Romain, Paris Attic studio | Batiik Studio | Paris, FR | 2016 |
M.XXS.3 | Boulevard Malesherbes | Sylvie Cahen | Paris, FR | 2006 |
M.XXS.4 | 13 m2 | Szymon Hanczar | Wrocław, PL | 2014 |
M.XXS.5 | Apt. 911, Starter I | AP Szczepaniak | Wrocław, PL | 2013 |
M.XXS.6 | Rue Lourmel | Sylvie Cahen | Paris, FR | 2016 |
M.XXS.7 | Rue Des Canettes | Sylvie Cahen | Paris, FR | 2010 |
M.XXS.8 | The Lux Pod | Studio Bednarski | London, UK | 2010 |
M.XXS.9 | Tiny apartament in Paris | Kitoko Studios | Paris, FR | 2014 |
M.XXS.10 | La Casa Piu Piccola di Italia | Marco Pierazzi | Rome, IT | 2010 |
No. | Area [m2] | Volume [m3] | Living Space [m2] | Ancillary Space [m2] * | Share of Residential Space in Total Floor Area | No. of Users | Usable Space per 1 Person [m2] | Outside Space, Type, and Area [m2] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
S (25–35 m2) | ||||||||
M.S.1 | 35.3 | 100.3 | 27.8 | 7.5 | 78.9% | 1 | 35.3 | balcony 1.5 |
M.S.2 | 32.8 | 112.6 | 22.4 | 10.4 | 68.3% | 1–2 | 16.4–32.8 | – |
M.S.3 | 31.7 | 83.0 | 26.2 | 5.5 | 82.6% | 2 | 15.85 | – |
M.S.4 | 30.3 | 89.7 | 22.6 | 7.7 | 74.6% | 1–2 | 15.1–30.3 | terrace |
M.S.5 | 29.9 | nd | 25.0 | 4.9 | 83.6% | 2 | 14.95 | – |
M.S.6 | 29.4 | 100.0 | 18.3 | 11.1 | 62.2% | 1 | 29.4 | – |
M.S.7 | 28.8 | 106.6 | 22.0 | 6.8 | 76.4% | 1–2 | 14.4–28.8 | – |
M.S.8 | 28.6 | 82.8 | 20.2 | 8.4 | 70.6% | 2 | 14.3 | loggia 5.05 |
M.S.9 | 27.5 | 96.2 | 19.9 | 7.6 | 72.4% | 2 | 13.75 | loggia 1.41 |
M.S.10 | 26.4 | 83.5 | 23.2 | 3.2 | 87.9% | 1 | 26.4 | – |
XS (15–25 m2) | ||||||||
M.XS.1 | 24.9 | 63.7 | 22.1 | 2.8 | 88.6% | 1 | 24.9 | – |
M.XS.2 | 23.4 | 71.8 | 19.9 | 3.5 | 85.0% | 1–2 | 11.7–23.4 | – |
M.XS.3 | 21.4 | 58.3 | 18.0 | 3.4 | 84.1% | 2 | 10.7 | – |
M.XS.4 | 20.8 | 66.8 | 11.2 | 9.6 | 53.8% | 2 | 10.4 | – |
M.XS.5 | 20.0 | 62.8 | 11.1 | 8.9 | 55.4% | 1–2 | 10.0–20.0 | – |
M.XS.6 | 18.9 | 58.7 | 12.4 | 6.5 | 65.4% | 1–2 | 9.45–18.9 | – |
M.XS.7 | 18.7 | 61.7 | 11.1 | 7.6 | 59.3% | 1–2 | 9.35–18.7 | – |
M.XS.8 | 18.5 | 64.0 | 13.5 | 5.0 | 72.9% | 1 | 18.5 | – |
M.XS.9 | 18.2 | 72.8 | 11.9 | 6.3 | 65.4% | 1–2 | 9.1–18.2 | balcony 2.0 |
M.XS.10 | 15.6 | 46.0 | 10.8 | 4.8 | 69.1% | 1 | 15.6 | – |
XXS (<15 m2) | ||||||||
M.XXS.1 | 15.4 | 37.8 | 6.9 | 8.5 | 44.6% | 1–2 | 7.7–15.4 | – |
M.XXS.2 | 15.3 | 51.4 | 8.7 | 6.6 | 56.9% | 1–2 | 7.65–15.3 | – |
M.XXS.3 | 13.2 | 45.9 | 7.8 | 5.4 | 58.9% | 1–2 | 6.6–13.2 | – |
M.XXS.4 | 13.0 | 43.3 | 9.3 | 3.7 | 71.4% | 1 | 13 | – |
M.XXS.5 | 12.9 | 34.5 | 8.4 | 4.5 | 64.8% | 1 | 12.9 | – |
M.XXS.6 | 11.9 | 44.7 | 8.6 | 3.4 | 71.7% | 2 | 5.95–11.9 | – |
M.XXS.7 | 9.5 | 37.5 | 5.6 | 3.9 | 58.9% | 1 | 9.5 | – |
M.XXS.8 | 9.4 | 26.0 | 7.0 | 2.4 | 74.3% | 1–2 | 4.7–9.4 | – |
M.XXS.9 | 7.6 | 20.2 | 6.3 | 1.3 | 82.7% | 1 | 7.6 | – |
M.XXS.10 | 6.3 | 21.7 | 4.9 | 1.4 | 77.1% | 1–2 | 3.15–6.3 | – |
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Gronostajska, B.E.; Szczegielniak, A. Inside a Microapartment: Design Solutions to Support Future Sustainable Lifestyles. Buildings 2021, 11, 654. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11120654
Gronostajska BE, Szczegielniak A. Inside a Microapartment: Design Solutions to Support Future Sustainable Lifestyles. Buildings. 2021; 11(12):654. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11120654
Chicago/Turabian StyleGronostajska, Barbara Ewa, and Anna Szczegielniak. 2021. "Inside a Microapartment: Design Solutions to Support Future Sustainable Lifestyles" Buildings 11, no. 12: 654. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11120654
APA StyleGronostajska, B. E., & Szczegielniak, A. (2021). Inside a Microapartment: Design Solutions to Support Future Sustainable Lifestyles. Buildings, 11(12), 654. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11120654