Home Real Estate NEVER TOO SMALL Our Smallest London Tiny Home – 13sqm/140sqft

NEVER TOO SMALL Our Smallest London Tiny Home – 13sqm/140sqft

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NEVER TOO SMALL Our Smallest London Tiny Home – 13sqm/140sqft

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Nina Tolstrup and Jack Mama, of Studiomama, discovered this unique 13m2 space as a part of a series of projects exploring the potential for small footprint living. Formerly a taxi office, they radically redesigned the north London home to better fit its tiny proportions, with themselves in mind. Keeping only the bathroom and the kitchen in their original locations they added built-in storage along each of the internal walls, incorporating a standing desk, seating, and even a dining nook that expands to seat 6. A murphy bed was also concealed inside what first appears to be a wardrobe at the far end of the home, with storage incorporated inside the cabinetry surrounding it. A plywood finish is carried throughout the home creating a seamless feel that is supplemented by pops of brilliant pink.

#smallapartment #architecture #interiordesign

Music: Wishes by Lane King

Produced by New Mac Video Agency
Creator: Colin Chee
Director: Nam Tran
Cinematographer: Oliver Wilson
Producer: Lindsay Barnard
Editor: Jessica Ruasol

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29 COMMENTS

  1. That bench seating really needs slanted sides so you can have more comfortable leg room. Also, whats with the awkward joinery? Not as high spec as we usually see here, which is surprising. In such a tiny space any odd shadows and lines are very obvious in a way that bigger spaces don't experience.

  2. In other words it is living in a perpetual motel room, that rent out weekly/monthly. For transient and those who cannot afford a apartment or home. The ceilings are too low here for taller folks. I would say this is suitable only as an AirBNB type rental, or someone with no friends and family.

  3. for a space this small i would use futons that can be folded away like in Japan. Murphy bed too bulky. Then space can be used for other things after

  4. How do you get comfortably in and out of bed , there is barely enough space to sit beside the bed. And opening the closet when the bed is down looks impossible. This space feels cramped. And where is the fridge?

  5. If I may speak frankly. Do we really need two BIG windows? Why didn't they centralize the door entry? I can only assume that /had/ to work within the perimeters of this building. Even so, WHY would you want to close off the entry way like that? It could've been a bench with built-in storage that didn't disrupt the sight-line from the entry way! That "dining nook" and "seating area" looks SO uncomfortable……………………………….This wasn't my favorite.

  6. looks pretty like a movie set with some theoretical thought into usability. but i highly doubt the designers have ever lived there because the practical liveability of this is zero.

  7. This looks terrible, too pink and cheap. Also – in Poland the space has to be 26m2 or 28m2 to be considered a flat that you can be registered at. It should be what it was designed for – a small office space.

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