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Interior based on sliding wall panels

It is known that in developed cities of Asia there is very little free space. Remember the apartment-case of "Tokyo Drift"? So, it is in such conditions that the poor Japanese people live. In Hong Kong, although it is not Japan, there are absolutely the same problems: there is little space, meager flats, expensive living space. Do you want / do not want, but something must be done about it ...

Hong Kong architect Gary Chang (Gary Chang) proposed his concept of organizing cramped living space. He turned each wall of the room into a moving panel: he wanted to go to the kitchen - he moved one panel, to the bathroom - he moved another.

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In the concept there are echoes of traditional Asian interior design, where the main value is empty space - the path to harmony between man and the environment. Chang's wall panels are a kind of Japanese sliding partitions (fusuma) that have been reworked in a modern way, which he forced to move in a different plane.

Despite the obvious drawbacks (if you want to move from such a kitchen to the hall with a plate of miso soup in one hand and a cup of jasmine tea in the other - the wall will have to be pushed out with unattended body parts for this) the concept has a right to life. At least, its main idea - a moving double-sided wall - can be used to diversify the interior of any room.

Gary Chang's Interior Video

// math let me down! we are talking about 330 square feet, which is about 30 square meters. meters, not 120, as I wrote earlier. wildly sorry for the misinformation. Thanks again to the one who corrected.

Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/92906/


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