Drawing upon the sparse tranquility of Japanese design, architect and Tokyo resident Azby Brown explains how to live comfortably in limited or overcrowded domains. By rethinking our approach to space, utilizing seemingly dead areas (under-floor or under-stairs storage, for example), creating multipurpose or convertible areas, and reconsidering layout, we can make the most of what we have. Some of these homes carry Eastern minimalism to an extreme that clutter-prone Westerners may not be comfortable with, but there are plenty of ingenious furniture, storage, and planning solutions nevertheless. --Amy Handy
Wow. This book was printed in 1993, and it holds up well after 30 years. Some of the furniture designs reflect a different time, but the design elements are still valuable.
I love to visit an Ikea store. I think they sell cheap garbage that will be in landfills rather than handed down to future generations, but I love to see the "living large in small spaces" concepts. This books reminds me of those mini apartments you see in an Ikea store.
Great ideas for living large in small spaces if you have the money for custom work.
This was interesting. I felt that most of the high impact suggestions were only feasible for people who own their space, but there were enough little details I felt I could appreciate. I liked poring over the diagrams. Wish my library copy had fewer pages torn out.
Azby Brown's Japanaese-inspired Small Spaces features residential designs that may be as compact as the Tokyo airport traveler's pod or as spacious as a Japanese urban palace.
Almost all of the designs feature open spaces and clear surfaces that become possible with built-ins - cabinets, shelves, bedding, kitchens and even a bathroom. Many are not practical or needed in American homes, but do stimulate a minimalist perspective. The chapter Odd Corners and Dead Space, is particularly helpful to find and conceptualize small spaces that can be re-engineered for a big space gain.
The chapter Japanese Housing Past Present Future comments on design for the coming decades, that is both comical and sort of prophetic: "In the coming decades, more and more people will be able to move to the countryside and commute to work 'telectronically' with increasing use of faxes, modems and the telephone. But for those of us who need to live in modern cities, either by necessity or inclination, and will want to live beautifully and wisely, there will be more and more reason to learn from the Japanese - not the elite, who can still occupy urban villas, but the common people who live within limits and the designers who struggle to answer their needs." Reviewing my planned reading for this week, I'm finding plenty of American designers to learn from.
Thanks to this book, I cannot stop thinking about building secret hiding places into the stairs and floor of my house. Hmm...although now that I've told you, now it's not a secret anymore...