apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


East #5: Family of Four’s “Two Bedroom” Studio

Name: Patrick & Family
Location: West Village, NY
Size: 640 sf
Rent/Own: Own

What is the advantage of SMALL? For us, small is about sharing our lives with one another. Living small helps us identify our priorities and stay close as a family. It requires us to evaluate what’s really important in our home and find a creative way to fit it into our space...

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What is the advantage of SMALL? CONT'D

For example, our bedroom grew out of 3 priorities: having some private adult space, the need for a place to watch TV without disturbing sleeping children at night or work-at-home mom during the day, and a bed that is safe for sometimes co-sleeping. Our bedroom fulfills all three needs as simply as possible. The TV is mounted on the wall, a pocket door provides a good sound seal, and the fact that the queen size bed is surrounded by walls on 3 ½ sides ensures no one, kid or adult, ever falls out of bed!

Our apartment is now warm and cozy and perfect for our family of 2 adults, a preschooler, a baby, and a dog. We’ve made room for many family treasures that make this our home, including the rocking horse you can see in our current shots.

What's your favorite resource for your home?

In addition to the usual suspects of Apartment Therapy, Room and Board, Design Within Reach, Ikea, etcetera, our favorite resource was boat manufacturers. We renovated our 540 square foot studio to have 2 bedroom spaces (a loft for the kids and a compact bedroom for the adults).

In the process, we spent quite a bit of time reading books and sites about boat design, and asking questions of friends and family that live part-time on a boat or part-time in an RV to figure out how to make a small space work for parents and kids.

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What is your one favorite element in your small, cool home?

Our favorite is the stairs and the cabinets beneath. The treads are eco-friendly bamboo, which plays well off the dark cork floors. The resin glows gorgeously at night with the recessed LED lights on. The cabinets look sleek but function as an ultracompact garage.

Beneath the stairs, those white squares are all doors or drawers. Suitcases, DVDs, coats, bags, printer, our “landing strip,” even the TiVo and cable box are organized in them. (The electronics face the bedroom, where we have a wall mounted TV). With 2 kids, we’re also glad the front of the cabinets is highly washable!



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Small Cool 2008 - East

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Comments (88)

I can't wait to see more....especially those stair cabinets.

posted by polkadot on April 2nd 2008 at 7:32am
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If this is not small and cool, I don't know what else is. Using boat design books as a resource....brilliant!

posted by cinema on April 2nd 2008 at 7:34am
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This is beautiful...I love the spacious feel that the high ceilings give the kitchen!

posted by me-n-dj on April 2nd 2008 at 7:35am
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Love the acrylic panels with greenish blue dots. Resource please!

posted by Siddhu on April 2nd 2008 at 7:36am
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Umm...this is pretty much rockstar design. Congrats!

posted by hessilou on April 2nd 2008 at 7:42am
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I too can't wait to see more and I'm sure we will. I don't know, I think I would've counted just the original 540 sf, rather than the 640 sf resulting from the loft you put in. It's so impressive that you started with 540 and you have 4 humans and a dog in there!

Designing stairs as fabulous storage, as well as a way up to the loft, is so smart.

posted by Pixie on April 2nd 2008 at 7:45am
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Now here's the upside of increasing the s.f. requirements--we get to see a family of 4 shoehorned into 160 s.f. per capita. Those understairs cabinets are clever, as is the catty-cornered kitchen sink. I also really appreciate the well-reasoned explanations of the thought process behind the design considerations--that had a lot to do with swaying my vote. Insta-finalist, I say.

posted by treehouse on April 2nd 2008 at 7:46am
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Do the panels under the stairs open up to reveal storage? The look like great hidey places.

posted by kimg924 on April 2nd 2008 at 7:46am
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In the first photo in the slideshow, is that plexi on the back of the shelving? DIY? Love plexi.

posted by Pixie on April 2nd 2008 at 7:49am
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Wow!

I love the blue in the kitchen.

posted by Ana on April 2nd 2008 at 7:53am
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Super cool! And super unique. I think you are going to get huge points for really clever ideas.

posted by art on April 2nd 2008 at 7:55am
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(for the love of God please get rid of that Ikea video!)

posted by *heather leaf* on April 2nd 2008 at 7:56am
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Love it, and extra bonus points for not being a professional designer. You did the homework yourself!

posted by etslee on April 2nd 2008 at 7:58am
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I'm also really excited to see a space with kids. This apartment is so intelligent -- it truly is the kind of thing I love to see on AT. Would love to check back with this family when the kids get bigger and see what it's like then.

I think one of the things this apartment does particularly well is make "seperate spaces" out of one space. Having different areas that feel "away" but yet aren't really. You can spend lots of money on great stuff, but achieving this effect can only happen with excellent design.

posted by SFGail on April 2nd 2008 at 8:04am
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Bravo! Absoutlely stunning! I am very impressed! This is what space planning is all about, and finding a way to incorporate all the needs of a family into such a small space with this much creativity is definately award winning.

This is what A.T. is all about! Proof that you don't need 3,000 sq ft to raise a family. If only the rest of America could "get it' and learn to live in smaller spaces.

posted by Devyn on April 2nd 2008 at 8:06am
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Just beautiful. The staircase storage is brilliant, and I love that the kids have their own space in such a small apartment.

posted by jazzybel on April 2nd 2008 at 8:08am
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Super cool.

posted by martita on April 2nd 2008 at 8:12am
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Where can I get the blue color on the Kitchen walls? love it!

posted by Siddhu on April 2nd 2008 at 8:16am
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the panels look like 3form ecoresin... http://www.3-form.com/materials-varia-play.php

posted by meredith on April 2nd 2008 at 8:26am
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Um ... hello... yes, please! Although I'd like to see more "soft" touches (rug in the living room...) especially for kids, this is totally fab nonetheless. What's with the panels above the kitchen (connecting to the loft), though? Do they pop out? It looks like two hang down or something. Or do they slide for viewing?

Also ... if you read this, can you tell me how you like your corner sink? I've been eyeing that at ikea for my quick kitchen redo, but I'm wondering if its a pain not having a sink large enough to put cookie sheets, etc. in.

posted by ridge_van_winkle on April 2nd 2008 at 8:29am
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This is truly inspirational!! Great job - I bet you're an awesome family to hang out with.

posted by bumblebeechicago on April 2nd 2008 at 8:37am
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Love this place!I have one question though, it looks like 2 of the dot panels are longer than the rest. Is there a reason for this or was that just a design choice? It stood out to me.

posted by AndreaU on April 2nd 2008 at 8:40am
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Wow! What a lot of clever ideas! I really like it overall, with the primary exception of the bed alcove. I'd be miserable having to climb over another adult, a baby, and (in my case) a dog to go to the bathroom in the middle of the night. Other than that, I love the space--I'm a sucker for houseboat-inspired design.

posted by Molly Margarita on April 2nd 2008 at 8:41am
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From Katie (part of the "& Family" in this entry)
The orange on the shelving is indeed Plexi from Canal Plastics. The loft wall that is white with blue dots is eco resin from 3 form. The dots are made from sea shells. The squares that hang down are on a sliding track so they open for ventilation and children shouting down "look at me!" Patrick will have to let you know the paint color, that's all his doing!

posted by KatieD on April 2nd 2008 at 8:46am
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This is great. Funny thing... the books on the shelves look so neat and orderly and appealing. Why is it that sometimes, books look so visually heavy, but theirs don't? Is it just that they have enough space? I'm glad they didn't sort by color, even though that does help in a lot of cases.

posted by Liana on April 2nd 2008 at 8:46am
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Well-done and efficient! But I'm curious about the lack of closets - I see only one smallish closet and a wardrobe. Is all of the family's clothing in folded storage under the stairs? There doesn't seem to be nearly enough hanging space for two adults and the older child.

posted by amed studio on April 2nd 2008 at 8:52am
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Love the blue... if the blues look anywhere near as good in person as they look in photos - then wow. Love it.

posted by Rob in PDX on April 2nd 2008 at 8:54am
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Beautiful and efficient and homey and and and - I love it!

posted by Gallivant on April 2nd 2008 at 8:59am
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awesome. great inspiration for parents who think they need tons of space for the kids. love the smart organization and un-clutter!

posted by selena on April 2nd 2008 at 9:03am
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love.

posted by otis on April 2nd 2008 at 9:13am
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great space...clean, modern, simple-it speaks Apartment Therapy and what we are all working towards in our own spaces. Thank you for sharing!

posted by 335ktt on April 2nd 2008 at 9:19am
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Ditto- get rid of that streaming lady from Ikea.
(oh- this apartment is amazing)

posted by right angle on April 2nd 2008 at 9:19am
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Now that's what I'm talking about, baby!

posted by Cassis on April 2nd 2008 at 9:25am
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simply beautiful and effective. thnx for showing us around.

posted by aad on April 2nd 2008 at 9:29am
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I would really love to see those under-stairs storage areas open. Please?

posted by mockduck on April 2nd 2008 at 9:35am
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now this is what living small and cool is all about. real people making practical use of good space.

posted by colellis on April 2nd 2008 at 9:49am
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It's a great space for a young couple. It looks very compact and sleek. I like the fact that there isn't a lot of "stuff" all over the place.

It's not so great for a young couple with kids. It looks TOO compact.

I'm not a big fan of kids but I think kids deserve more space than this.

Hey, that's my 2 cents.

posted by Weasel Dearest on April 2nd 2008 at 10:24am
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Superb. Beautiful use of space, beautiful color harmonies, quality not quanity.

To weasel dearest: "kids deserve more space than this"...
I have to think you comment is really elitist. It looks too compact to you, but it seems that the people who live here are comfortable, and it's their call anyway. Hundreds of millions of children and adults would be lucky to live in such luxury.

posted by wannabe minimalist on April 2nd 2008 at 11:00am
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Really gorgeous... but I too wonder where they keep their clothes.

posted by gray lady on April 2nd 2008 at 11:09am
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I think this is a great use of space and it is very creative. I love it.

Kids have plenty of space in the great outdoors. I've only been to New York City once but I do recall there being some wonderful outdoor spaces and parks. If anything I think this use of space really helps children to be more interactive, creative and know how to value family over material things.

Thanks for sharing and best of luck.

posted by desertflower on April 2nd 2008 at 12:26pm
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Great use of space! But not groovin' on the blue -- too harsh for me. Other colors are nice.

posted by Mid-C Frank on April 2nd 2008 at 12:28pm
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Great place! Are there a few different tones of blue on the walls or is that just shadows?

posted by evilpenguin81 on April 2nd 2008 at 2:14pm
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I love your Kitchen

posted by RKDsign on April 2nd 2008 at 2:33pm
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Is this unit on the top floor and how high is the ceiling?

You guys must spend a lot of quality time together since I can't see any traces of a T.V set. :-D

posted by phase2phase on April 2nd 2008 at 2:48pm
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Wonderful! Great plan, easily understood design scheme, smart storage and space saving ideas. This is what the contest is all about; Bravo!

posted by HopeK on April 2nd 2008 at 2:49pm
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Brilliant.
I wish we had seen a picture of your living room--but that can wait! I particularily love how the floor plan shows it is a space for all of you--with the kids table and craft supplies. Well done.

posted by Alana in Canada on April 2nd 2008 at 2:51pm
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J'adore!

posted by shadowswimming on April 2nd 2008 at 4:59pm
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Hi all, Patrick here, thanks for the overwhelming support! We really thought long and hard (with some help from an architect friend on the structure) on how to make this space work (we lived here for a few years pre-kids). If we make it farther, we'll be sure to show the spaces under the stairs.

A few answers:
- Siddhu: The blue is Benjamin Moore Tranquil Blue. It does change with the light.
- Ridge: I love the twin corner sink - you can pile a few dishes and still have a usable sink free. It's the only place we could really put it without totally screwing with the plumbing too much. The thing that makes it doable for larger items is the pull-out faucet sprayer. I do kinda wish we had gone under-mount.
- As for the general ?s about clothes: we each have our own spot and only keep out seasonal clothes. The walk-in closet by the front door has mine (the lines there are the hanging stuff with deep storage behind), Katie has the wardrobe in the hall, and the kids have dressers upstairs (one with hanging space), noted in the floorplan.
- Phase2phase: It's the 7th floor - top of the original built structure. Ceilings are about 13' IIRC. And we have a TV on the wall in the downstairs BR.

posted by KatieD on April 2nd 2008 at 6:23pm
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The stairs and kitchen ceiling make the space look a lot bigger, that's great. Don't care for the storage up against the bed, seems train-ish, but overall, a great spot for the square footage.

posted by rhodesj on April 2nd 2008 at 7:37pm
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Wow - beautiful home! Truly feels like an oasis. Love the blue, the lighting on the stairs, and the smart idea to look to boats for inspiration.

posted by suzebk on April 2nd 2008 at 8:41pm
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Amazing. Living on a sailboat really helped develop my love of small spaces and you have used many sailor's tricks to great effect. this is wonderful not only for it's creative use of design but the lovely colours and textures through out the flat.

posted by TheoJ on April 2nd 2008 at 8:59pm
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I appreciate the efficiency, but aesthetically it leaves me kind of cold...

posted by guido on April 3rd 2008 at 4:38am
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Fantastic! Not only do I love to see a space with kids, but you did it in under 650 sf. I simply can't wait to see more.

AT staff, take notice. No need to raise the square footage limit.

posted by hja on April 3rd 2008 at 7:15am
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i'm not a fan of the colour blue but yours is breathtaking - the first blue walls i've seen that i actually really, really like.
thanks for sharing.

posted by kiwi on April 3rd 2008 at 9:40am
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No words... should have sent a poet.

posted by Christopher on April 3rd 2008 at 10:08am
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This is incredible!
I love how being in a small space made you so thoughtful about your choices--it's definitely a way to exercise intelligence.
Bravo!

posted by karyn on April 3rd 2008 at 11:12am
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that kitchen is gorgeous! and looks so spacious!

posted by jenna24 on April 3rd 2008 at 12:14pm
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Just great!

posted by DWF on April 3rd 2008 at 1:03pm
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The kitchen, the stairs, love it!

posted by orangeappled on April 3rd 2008 at 2:17pm
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OMG! KT and PAT!!! Folks, I have had the honor of seeing this place before and now after. The last time I saw this apartment was (sadly) 6 years ago. (has it been the long?) I am speechless. Wonderful work!! The STAIRS! Bless you.

SF Gail- Intelligent is definitely the word these guys are both geniuses.

Phase2Phase-And I knew there had to be a TV... they love their John Stewart too much.

Miss you guys... Hope ya win!

posted by Ty on April 3rd 2008 at 6:55pm
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As someone who has lived on a boat and in other small spaces, I'm very impressed by your choices.

To the people who think it's cold: The smaller the space, the more spare it has to be to not wear on your nerves. Imagine how warm it would be with four people and a dog as "decorations."

posted by Easyenough on April 4th 2008 at 12:22pm
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wow!

posted by saudoso on April 4th 2008 at 12:49pm
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I also really love this apartment. Excellent use of space. As a family of four we are now facing a dilemna about what to do next. Our kids are a little older than yours 5 and 2, and as you will no doubt discover they just keep on acquiring stuff not matter how much you give away! I hope you manage to keep working out your space as the children get older!- Liz

posted by bzlizzy on April 4th 2008 at 9:27pm
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Are you kidding me? The plastic shows in your kitchen -is ghetto, like a house that belongs in the fabellas

posted by L.A. on April 5th 2008 at 6:43am
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Sorry guys, that was a stupid friend of mine who grabbed my laptop.

posted by jbv1978 on April 5th 2008 at 6:48am
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now this is great. really well thought out and complete use of space. interesting controlled use of material. great color sense. fun. love the stair level lights, the wall instead of another banister, and all of the nooks.

posted by healthyhome on April 5th 2008 at 12:02pm
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drool!!!!

posted by lesterhead on April 8th 2008 at 9:25am
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Truly an inspiration to a young couple hoping to afford room for kids. Sadly we don't have your ceilings but this makes me realise we could do with even less space than I anticipated.

I was already a firm beliver that sleeping spaces should be compact and serene to encourage all other activities to take place elsewhere.

My theroretical kid's rooms will likely look like dorm rooms at best.

posted by DahliaCactus on April 9th 2008 at 7:24am
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Wow! This is the winner IMHO. Super stylish, creative and inspiring.

posted by montecore on April 9th 2008 at 7:49am
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love.
love.
love.

posted by xjessicax on April 11th 2008 at 7:51am
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It's great to hear other parents and parents-to-be considering smaller space! It is indeed a constant battle to stem the tide of stuff that comes in with/for kids, but one that needs to be fought regardless of size. At some point the little ones will surely outgrow it, but we hope to have a few more years.

Dahlia, I couldn't agree with you more - bedrooms are for bed activities. Even when we had bigger bedrooms, we didn't hang out there at all, so we really don't miss much there.

And the high ceilings are indeed what keep it from feeling cramped, and a big part of what drew us to the space initially. It's a great value since no one charges by the cubic foot!

posted by patrick74 on April 11th 2008 at 8:10pm
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My absolute favorite is the office. Love the way the shelves with all the books are on the wall with the cabinets below. The acrylic orange panel on the back of the bookcase is a great way to add a pop of color. The nursery could be a bit more homey. Need some curtains for those windows in the living room (didn't see any photos of the living area.) And for some reason, I think the kitchen could use 1-2 more cabinets. It makes me think that a cabinet was forgotten. Love the green dotted panels up top to close of the shelves.

Karen

posted by Alkemie on April 12th 2008 at 10:44am
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Patrick & Katie-

Is the entire loft wall eco-resin (specifically the solid white part)? We are adding a loft in our renovation and I still hadn't decided what materials to use to keep the kids from falling off of it, and I love what you did! Is the eco-resin strong enough to support a crazy kid who loves to climb walls? :)

posted by Keri Kolumbus on April 15th 2008 at 3:06pm
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Keri--
The wall is entirely resin, with 3-form's metal framework system and sliding tracks. I will say, they were a little hard to work with although its great in the end; it was the wrong size framework originally, parts had to be remade; and then Patrick had to help put it up because it's more intricate than you might imagine and the sliding track had to go up first, and other unforseen issues (for example-"measure twice, then make sure the length will fit in your building's elevator so you don't have to cut and weld" would make a good NY construction slogan).

However, I feel very secure with the end product, as the resin is pretty much unbreakable and the framework is heavy duty; the resin is screwed into it. We also have resin in the stair guard around the top of the stairs. Both have held up very well to a paranoid mom banging on it to test it and many playdates of rambunctious 4 year olds! Patrick can chime in more on how it was to put up.

posted by KatieD on April 15th 2008 at 7:36pm
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... this is one of the *coolest* things (not just spaces or places. include all nouns in general) that i have ever seen! i have one question; right now, it's crib and bed in the children's room. will there be space later to grow into a bedroom for two kids (two beds, multiple sets of toys)?

posted by aptsr4kidz on April 17th 2008 at 8:26am
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umm... i know it's not my job to be comment police. but, this nasty comment about patrick and katie's kitchen "looking ghetto" made by fellow contestant, luca...

shouldn't there be some kind of yellow or red flag penalty for that?

posted by aptsr4kidz on April 17th 2008 at 8:30am
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Hi aptsr4kids, thanks for the compliment! As for the kids' space, we got the crib type where it converts to a toddler bed (frame drops, sides come off) so he could sleep there as he gets older, and not take up any more floorspace. When he outgrows that, we'll need to readdress the layout; though there is length there to extend to a twin bed. As for toys, we don't keep many up there - to encourage playing in the communal space.

posted by patrick74 on April 17th 2008 at 12:44pm
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sorry i missed my opportunity to vote.... the stair is completely worth a "super cool" all on its own!

posted by phdesign on April 21st 2008 at 7:07pm
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Wow wow wow.

I'm amazed. So inventive. So inspiring. This is what it's all about.

Makes me feel like my 1000 square feet is a mansion. And to think there are people who suggested we move before we have kids!

posted by Elizcrtv on April 23rd 2008 at 3:31pm
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Those sliding lighted nooks in the bedroom!

Can't wait to see more pics.

posted by Elizcrtv on April 23rd 2008 at 3:34pm
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wait, I'm callin bulls*%$t on the folks who own (can do whatever they want to their space) AND have a baby (cute factor - hello!) ! competing against those who rent!

posted by sfrenters on April 25th 2008 at 2:48pm
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Brilliant use of space. If this isn't an insta-finalist, I don't know what is.

posted by Lisa Hunter (Montreal) on April 27th 2008 at 1:21pm
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The East is sure representing....

posted by quiltmaster on April 30th 2008 at 4:09pm
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This place is fantastic! Really inspiring. I'm in NY and am making plans for some renovations in our apartment. I would really love to get the name of your architect and contractor, if you can share them. I'd also love to see photos of the stairs w/the drawers/cabinets open, and of your bathroom, if it's been reno'ed too, and more of your kitchen. Do I spy stainless steel cabinets?

Great, great job!

posted by greer on May 5th 2008 at 3:07pm
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Greer, thanks for the compliment! Since we're in the finals, more pics are on the way. And I am happy to pass along the contact info - drop me an email to patrick at ultravirgo dot com. Best of luck with your renovation!

posted by patrick74 on May 6th 2008 at 1:01pm
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Super Cool, esp. the office. I love the high ceilings!

posted by timmy jr. on May 14th 2008 at 4:45pm
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Why you did not win I cannot figure out. use of space, great color, warm feeling...you have it all. Very well done.

posted by denverdigs on June 24th 2008 at 4:29pm
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Wonderful home! Sad I got here so late. For the commentor who stated children need more space, I can personally tell you that is not true. I grew up in approx. the same amount of space in a brownstone in Brooklyn until I was 7 years old. (There were 4 of us, but no dog). My sister and I always had plenty of space to run around in, plus we were always outside and down the street at the park anyway. When we moved, we "upgraded" to a house that was still smaller than 1000 sf! I lived there until I was 21 :)
Beautiful home!

posted by catebrook on June 29th 2008 at 8:53am
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