*협소주택 활용기 This Is How You Can Live Large in a Small Space

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For 15 years, metalworker Simone ten Hompel lived uncomfortably with the shortcomings of her London flat—four poorly insulated rooms squeezed into 398 square feet. She used the cold bedroom at the back for storage and the small living room at the front for virtually everything else; a futon mattress on the ground served as her bed and sofa, and a tray doubled as a dining table.

“I spent all my time on the floor,” she recalls. “But I promised myself I wouldn’t do anything apart from new paint, new carpet, and a new bathroom until I’d saved for a renovation. It needed to get on my nerves so badly that I would go through the hassle.”


She finally reached the breaking point in 2008 and approached Roger Hynam of Rogeroger Design Solutions, who had trained as an architect before becoming a joiner. Hynam, who once kept a workshop in the same building as ten Hompel’s metalworking studio, told her that he would prefer to concentrate on carpentry for the renovation and suggested that she hire Silvia Ullmayer and Allan Sylvester of Ullmayer Sylvester Architects to design her new living space.

Ten Hompel’s brief was succinct, befitting her tiny space: more storage and insulation and a better connection with her hilly surroundings in a rejuvenated pocket of Islington, North London. The team it in a uniquely collaborative way, with Ullmayer Sylvester planning the space, Hynam creating the built-in storage and the kitchen island, and ten Hompel making models and scrawling on the wall to better envision their proposals. Drawing on their creative backgrounds, they were able to share and refine ideas with more rigor than is customary in a designer-client relationship. “It was a dream team,” Ullmayer says. “Simone comes from a craft background and Roger comes from a craft background, so we were able to have a level discussion.”

To make the most of the small footprint, they opted to remove all the internal walls and knock through the ceiling. The latter move created a mezzanine bedroom, giving ten Hompel more than 178 square feet of additional floor space, and doubling the height of the living room to 16.4 feet at its tallest point. The new ceiling has a fully retractable mechanical skylight that opens 8.2 feet wide and closes automatically when sensors detect rain or excessive wind.

“Our focus was on maximizing the spatial experience rather than the floor space,” says Ullmayer, who adds that she steered ten Hompel away from her initial inclination to keep the ceiling and create a larger sleeping space in the attic. “It was about making one space that feels really generous and can be subdivided into smaller spaces.”

Key to this flexible subdivision of space is a sliding storage wall that Hynam and his team designed and built between the kitchen and living room; it has three sections that can be moved to either side to open up or completely separate the rooms. When friends or family stay over, ten Hompel can grab a camping mattress from the cabinets under the stairs—another of Hynam’s innovations—and close the wall to transform the kitchen into a bedroom. And when guests gather around a new dining table that seats up to nine, she can slide the wall to the side to create one big space. “Our approach was to make things that are part of the fabric of the flat, but also multifunctional,” Ullmayer says. “Rather than dictate how the space has to be used, they offer invitations of how it can be to live in. (Her heating bills have been cut about in half, she says.) New soundproofing beneath the floorboards has also made it quieter. 

Construction started in December 2009 and was completed the following April; detailed joinery, such as the shelves in the sliding wall and the wardrobe in ten Hompel’s bedroom, was added in phases over the rest of 2010. “I’m a slow person, so I needed to live in the space before I could know exactly what I wanted from the storage,” she says.

Ullmayer Sylvester aptly named the project Living Workshop because it gives ten Hompel space to prepare models at home for the metal spoons, bowls, and other objects that she creates. She stores model-making materials beneath the stairs and in her bedroom, cuts them into shapes on her kitchen island, and puts them together on the clean sweep of floor in her living space, where she also cuts firewood in the wintertime, “like a hunter-gatherer in London,” she says.

The flat works equally well in summer, when ten Hompel opens the skylight to make her mezzanine feel more like a terrace. “The bed is on casters,” she says, “so I can move it around to follow the sun, and at night I can look up at the stars.” That kind of flexibility is perhaps the flat’s greatest achievement. While other small homes force their owners into a more edited way of life, ten Hompel’s space allows her to live expansively. “I made the flat how I am, so now I can live the way I want to,” she says. “It doesn’t feel small when I walk through it.”




from dwell

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