Transforming Interiors: MIT CityHome by MIT Media Labs - 1

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Transforming Interiors | Space: we all need it and we all want a lot of it when it comes to our living arrangements. But as cities become more urbanized and more crowded, living spaces become smaller. Making the most out of a small apartment has become a real and constant challenge.

Fortunately for us mere mortals, many designers have mastered the art of transforming interiors that turn tiny living spaces into big, functional homes. Here is a rundown of modular transforming interiors that we all would want to live in.

Transforming Pop-Up House by TallerDE2 Architects

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Imagine an apartment you can reconfigure in different ways by simply activating and deactivating individual parts of its infrastructure. The Pop-Up House by TallerDE2 Architects is designed as a one-person flat with panels that hide components and utilities, and partitions that can be moved around to form the inhabitant’s desired space. The 68.5 sqm flat is made up of 54 individual elements that can be opened, closed, unfolded and moved to create a flexible living space. These individual elements can be opened up to reveal windows, shelves, and storage spaces; pulled down to create table tops; or moved to create rooms or expand the transforming interior space.

Pop-Up House by TallerDE2 Architects | Gallery

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Lego Apartment by Barbara Appolloni Architect

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Lego bricks are designed to fit perfectly with their fellow bricks. In the same way, the Lego Apartment by Spanish architect Barbara Appolloni is made up of pieces designed to fit perfectly together. It’s a perfect analogy to transforming interiors. Located on the rooftop of a narrow building in Barcelona, the 24 sqm transforming apartment is inspired by boat interiors and Japanese minimalism. The apartment has walls that hide everything but the shower and the sink. The toilet, kitchen, dining table, closet, and bed are all hidden in the walls, and can be easily accessed by opening or pulling out panels.

Lego Apartment by Barbara Appolloni Architect | Gallery

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Transforming Interiors by MIT Media Labs

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Developed by MIT Media Labs, the MIT CityHome is a gesture-controlled house within a box. It is literally an entire apartment packed into a mechanical box that is roughly the size of a closet. The box houses a bed, dining table, kitchen surface, cooking range, closet, and storage spaces. Any of these domestic components can be accessed via gesture, touch or voice control. According to its creators, the CityHome is designed to make any tiny apartment space “more livable.”

MIT CityHome by MIT Media Labs | Gallery

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Transforming Interior Design Framework by PKMN Architectures

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Mobile, transformable stacks suspended from a rail system make the All I Own House by PKMN Architectures as flexible and adaptable as any small apartment can be. The wooden stacks serve as storage containers and partitions, and the residents of this transforming apartment can move them around to create the room or space they need. Only the plumbing and appliances are static. The transforming apartment also includes a small space outside of the movable elements to create an illusion of extended space.

All I Own House by PKMN Architectures | Gallery

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Transforming Artists Studio by Ranaan Stern

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Israeli architect Ranaan Stern transformed a 15 square meter room into a living and working space by incorporating several drawers and storage units of different sizes and configurations into the room. The Space Saving Modular Studio houses two desks, peg board display walls, shelves, 36 drawers, modular storage compartments, and a bed tucked away into the wall. The tiny room can be used as an organized working studio or a comfortable guest room.

Space Saving Modular Studio by Ranaan Stern | Gallery

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Transforming Apartment Design by Vlad Mishin

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The Transformer Apartment by Russian designer Vlad Mishin utilizes blocks that rotate or fold to define the borders of space within the 60 square meter apartment. The apartment is separated by a wall structure, one end of which is composed of transforming blocks that reveal a TV and storage space and opens up to the bedroom. The main section of the wall hides away the kitchen equipment, the refrigerator, and the bathroom door.

Transformer Apartment by Vlad Mishin | Gallery

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Transforming Interior Design: Wall into Open Seating Layout

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Clive Wilkinson Architects used modular systems that function as architecture and furniture in the design of the Disney Store Headquarters in Pasadena, California. Some of the dual-function elements of the design include a 20-person Block Conference Room that has two walls made of foam blocks. The wall of foam blocks can be disassembled to serve as a 200-person seating system for company-wide meetings. Another element is a honeycomb structure that forms a second conference room and also serves as product display shelves.

Disney Store Headquarters by Clive Wilkinson Architects | Gallery

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Transforming Home/Office Design by Yuko Shibata

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Japanese designer Yuko Shibata transformed a residential space into a home office by adding a mobile wall and two bookshelves with large doors that allow the inhabitants to switch from “home” to “office” without changing the original floor plan. In the project, called Switch, a mobile wall slides over the dining table to create a meeting room and a library, both sharing the same table. A bookshelf in the bedroom area becomes a partition between the bedroom and the study area to create a larger working space while keeping the bedroom private.

Switch/Yuko Shibata Office by Yuko Shibata | Gallery

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Transforming Interior System by Studio_01

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The winner of a design competition, the Barcode Room by Studio_01 is a concept studio apartment consisting of furniture-walls that can be moved and combined to create different room configurations. A furniture-wall or bar hides a specific component, like a closet, table, or chair that can be pulled out or unfolded as needed. Users have 12 types of bar components to choose from and they can use their own combinations to create the room or space they need. Different combinations of bars result to different rooms and layouts. The bars can be used to configure a new apartment or added to an existing apartment.

Barcode Room by Studio_01 | Gallery

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Transforming Apartment Design by Gary Chang

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Hong Kong-based architect Gary Chang’s 32 sqm apartment transforms into 24 different designs. The apartment, which was the architect’s childhood home since he was 14, has furniture that can be folded or hidden away and walls that move on tracks to create different configurations and rooms, including a large kitchen, living room, dining room, guest room, laundry room, library, and even a full spa. Not only that, some of the mechanical systems of the apartment can be controlled via smartphone.

Domestic Transformer by Gary Chang | Gallery

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Domestic Transformer by Gary Chang 2 - 82 Domestic Transformer by Gary Chang 3 - 83 Domestic Transformer by Gary Chang 1 - 84 Barcode Room by Studio_01 2 - 85 Barcode Room by Studio_01 3 - 86 Barcode Room by Studio_01 1 - 87 Switch Yuko Shibata Office by Yuko Shibata 3 - 88 Switch Yuko Shibata Office by Yuko Shibata 2 - 89 Switch Yuko Shibata Office by Yuko Shibata 1 - 90 Disney Store Headquarters by Clive Wilkinson Architects 3 - 91 Disney Store Headquarters by Clive Wilkinson Architects 2 - 92 Disney Store Headquarters by Clive Wilkinson Architects 1 - 93 Transformer Apartment by Vlad Mishin 2 - 94 Transformer Apartment by Vlad Mishin 3 - 95 Transformer Apartment by Vlad Mishin 1 - 96 Space Saving Modular Studio by Ranaan Stern 1 - 97 Space Saving Modular Studio by Ranaan Stern 2 - 98 Space Saving Modular Studio by Ranaan Stern 3 - 99 All I Own House by PKMN Architectures 2 - 100 All I Own House by PKMN Architectures 1 - 101 All I Own House by PKMN Architectures 3 - 102 MIT CityHome by MIT Media Labs 3 - 103 MIT CityHome by MIT Media Labs 2 - 104 Lego Apartment by Barbara Appolloni Architect 3 - 105 Lego Apartment by Barbara Appolloni Architect 1 - 106 Lego Apartment by Barbara Appolloni Architect 2 - 107 Pop-Up House by TallerDE2 Architects 1 - 108 Pop-Up House by TallerDE2 Architects 3 - 109 Pop-Up House by TallerDE2 Architects 2 - 110 MIT CityHome by MIT Media Labs 1 - 111