Micro-living is no longer just for the very poor and the very bohemian. But how much space do we really deserve? Tracking down the minimum square-footage below which no one should be forced to endure.
Letters From London
Micro-living is no longer just for the very poor and the very bohemian. But how much space do we really deserve? Tracking down the minimum square-footage below which no one should be forced to endure.
As we progress from smartphones to smart toasters, our things are becoming increasingly connected. Soon they’ll be on Facebook alongside us. From there, it’s only a few steps to tactful beds.
I wouldn’t feel comfortable bringing an animal into existence if it were to have a nasty life and painful death.
A man follows his grandparents’ trek to Morocco—where the Alaouite Dynasty has ruled since 1666—to search for so-called “sacred music” amid a feedback loop of riots, arrests, and the promise of miracles.
Micro-living is no longer just for the very poor and the very bohemian. But how much space do we really deserve? Tracking down the minimum square-footage below which no one should be forced to endure.
There wasn’t really enough room for two, let alone five, but we filed into the tiny apartment nonetheless, walking down a steep wooden staircase into the living area. Despite a huge window that filled one wall, the colors were dark, earthy. Everything smelt of cigarettes and coffee. The owner, a filmmaker, greeted our architect guide in Russian and waved vaguely at us; we could make ourselves at home.
The apartment was a tiny Soviet-era split-level close to the center of Moscow that had been comprehensively refurbished by our guide. It was a precursor to the modern “micro-flat,” a sub-300 square-foot space that had to accommodate the complex puzzle of daily life. Renovated and re-built, it was cramped but undeniably attractive, with simple modern furniture, a galley-like kitchen, a bathroom and bedroom space behind a sliding door, plus the detritus of hip Russian living—ashtrays, monographs, a bike, Fender telecaster, bowls of random tchotchkes. It was a bachelor pad, not a family home, but it fulfilled much the same function today as it was originally intended back in the 1920s. Only the ideologies and aspirations evinced by its contents were... Continue Reading