Sunday, March 6, 2011

Storage Furniture

By contrast, the modernization of housing has furniture being built into the structure. Clothes presses have become closets, and tea chests have become kitchen cupboards. In the search for efficient storage, furniture has become unboundedly integrated with the structure in which it is housed.

However, the amount of things a person has exceeds the anticipated space on a constant basis. People has become affluent, and the amount of things people have continues to grow. Even with new homes, which are nice and uncluttered upon being completed, a lot of people buy chests and storage systems in which to store away the overflow.

Life is something that changes on a constant basis. Looking at it this way, it could also be considered that furniture built in to the structure of a home is not suited to future family changes and the changes to their way of life. Flow planning decided on at the time of construction visualizes life at the present time; at some point, this will change. If that's the case, then perhaps it's a good idea to once again separate architecture and furniture as in the homes of the past and to think of things that change and things that don't.

First, create a box that is the unchanging architecture, and into that, put the necessary furnishings. And then in tune with the growth of the family, change the room layout of the house. There's this way of thinking, too.

This variability, it can also be said, is decided on how you think about storage furniture. We believe that housing from now on will search for solutions that are a step ahead of the idea of integrating furniture and architecture.

What do you think about storage furniture?

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