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Tag Archives: Small Style

12 Reasons Why You’ll Be Happier in a Smaller Home

thatchedCottage

For us it wasn’t a choice — we knew we HAD to live smaller or lose too much.

But lots of people do make the choice to live smaller — and the Becoming Minimalist blog has 12 good reasons to do so:

The first 3 we are already discovering in our small rental space:

  • Easier to maintain. Anyone who has owned a house knows the amount of time, energy, and effort to maintain it. All things being equal, a smaller home requires less of your time, energy, and effort to accomplish that task.
  • Less time spent cleaning. And that should be reason enough…
  • Less expensive. Smaller homes are less expensive to purchase and less expensive to keep (insurance, taxes, heating, cooling, electricity, etc.)

Read the whole post — and the comments –– for the complete story.

Speaking of blogs — I use a reader to skim through the blogs I subscribe to.  And for a few years I was quite happy to include dozens of decorating blogs.  It interests me and inspires me to see what other people are doing.

But no more.  As part of the minimal life we are working to lead, I unsubscribed from most of the decorating blogs.  It will soon be clear which ones I still follow.

Terence Conran — living small

Terence Conran is not a household name on this side of the Atlantic, but he is a legend in Europe (and kind of a hero to design fanatics here).

Conran

Now 81 years old, he’s been at the forefront of design (residential, commercial, graphic) since the 1950s, and he started some innovative companies to bring great design to the masses.

Ever the innovator, Sir Terence has gone online now with The Conran Shop and Conran Home  and ever the prolific author, has put his ideas about living small into a book – How to life in small spaces.

ConranBook

Lord love ‘im, he’s had his finger on the pulse of what is fashionable, cool, and avant garde for over 50 years. And living better in smaller spaces — is fashionable, cool, and avant garde.

Our first official site visit

Thursday evening was our first official, regular site visit with Laurel and Angelito from Novell.  We met at 6 and viewed the developments, and developments there were.

Here is what we saw:

FootingsForms

Here is what we learned:

  • The sewer for the main house is being moved and will join up to the laneway house’s sewer
  • The water supply for both houses will be sufficient for excellent water pressure in both homes (very good news for the folks in the main house, who currently have low pressure)
  • The builders did not reach hard pan under the whole foundation (that packed clay layer underneath most of Vancouver) so they are building the foundation on concrete footings — those are the forms you see
  • After the concrete pour there will be inspections, then more concrete
  • By the time of our next meeting in two weeks, the concrete walls of the main floor of the laneway house should be built and they will be ready (or nearly ready) for framing
  • The laneway house is going to be fully covered by Home Warranty Insurance. Which is actually something I did not think about, in my giddiness about the build.  Once it’s up — it won’t fall down.  Nor will it leak or creak or reek.  Which is a comfort

What we have to start thinking about:

  • Lighting plans (oh!  We are thinking about lighting!)
  • Millwork (i.e. kitchen — we have a cabinet maker selected and they will be building far advance of when the cabinets will go in)

Also — moving!  It’s happening and we are busy up to our eyeballs in the process.

Another super cool super small NYC apartment

Thius 425 square foot Manahttan apartment comes to us via the Inhabit website.

Manhattan-Micro-Loft-Specht-Harpman-5-537x357It’s another sleek, cool looking micro-apartment, built into a loft and over 3 floors.  Of course it is loaded with built-in storage — the space beneath the stairs is non-stop closet.  And it manages to maintain a comfortable feel while keeping clutter to a minimum.

The owners are using it as a pied-a-terre, not planning to live there full time, but I think it would be perfect for a single person (or a very compatible couple). I hope they hang a few paintings to take advantage of all that light.

BTW, you may want to subscribe to Inhabit’s newsletter.  It’s NYC-centric, but full of articles of interest to all sustainability and small-living fans.

A new career opportunity? you could clean up!

We are packing and packing and packing.  And then we look around — and nothing’s packed.

It’s amazing how much crap er stuff one collects in just 13 years.  In less than 1500 square feet.  I’m throwing out tons.  And giving tons away.  But there’s still so much stuff!

Wouldn’t it be lovely if someone would come in and take care of all this for me?

Like Christine Smart of Designing Moves.

According to this article, she is just the sort of person who will take care of all those tedious details, like she did for the Thorpes of Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

 She dove right in, arranging an auction, handling online sales on craigslist and eBay, and donating to charities. Ms. Smart also oversaw move-related details, such as cataloging items, space planning, packing, shipping and unpacking.

People in their senior years (ahem!) are downsizing from large homes to small. There is such a need for people who help the downsizers adapt to their new life that there’s  a National Association of Senior Move Managers.

Give me a few days and I will be on the phone to get their help.

Decorating the small place

In pursuance of my dream of having our place look much larger than it is, I am reading every magazine and blog post I can find about “decorating small”.  Luckily, Apartment Therapy is way ahead of me, and has many, many good ideas I can use.

In this article, the author explains the 3 things that make a big difference when you are living in a small space.

Turns out they are:

  • Lighting
  • Storage
  • Flexibility

I’m in total agreement.  Right now we are planning the lighting for the laneway.  Upstairs we will be using the abundance of natural light that will be coming in from our south-facing main windows.  Plus a nice pendant over the kitchen peninsula,

KLampand maybe one of these over the sectional

SRlampToo much?  It’s so hard to tell if we need that light or not.  Our thinking is that in the evening with the blinds shut on the windows, we may need some task lighting for knitting or reading that the pendant will not be suitable for.  We don’t want the whole room lit up, just a pool of light where we’ll be sitting.

Anyway, we are very carefully looking at the lighting in our place.

 

Now the fun part begins…..

I mean it!  Even though we are busier than ever with packing and tossing and moving and all the nuts and bolts of those things, now is the time when we can really get down to the fun of planning the decor of our new home.

It helps that we are moving into a tiny rental space.  There’s no time for us to regret shedding most of our furniture — we’ll be seeing pretty much how we will be living, so sentimentality will get put out on the curb along with those IKEA chairs.

Although most of the choices can be made at different times during the build process — we won’t need the sectional for the upstairs sitting area until we are ready to move in — we will need to decide on a number of options soon because we have to design how to get power to the lights we want.

For instance, we know we want the sputnik lamp above the bed

sputnik

 

(maybe with fewer arms)

sputnik2 so we’ll have the box wired into the ceiling to accommodate that.

Now for beside the bed — we want lighting beside the bed for night-time reading.  Mounted on the wall?  Or sitting on the bedside table? Mounted, since the tables are already very small.  Maybe a pendant?  No, we want a lamp with an arm so we can direct the light onto our books and away from our fellow sleeper’s faces.  We know where the bed will go — but how high will it be? How big will our headboard be?  We’ll need to place everything correctly.

We need storage under the bed, and because the bed will be placed so close to the side walls there won’t be room to pull out under-bed drawers, that means a lift-a-bed

bedLuckily they have a local distributor. So when we pick a bed, we will have a good idea how high the mattress will be in relation to the lamps, and we will know how wide the headboard should be, so we’ll be able to talk with the designer to get the boxes for the lamps put in just the right place.

And this is before we even break ground on the new place!

But doing this homework ahead of time and making clear decisions means no CHANGE ORDERS!  Change orders are just what they sound like, a way of taking your estimate and blowing it up (literally and figuratively).  Heaven forfend you change your mind on something after the trades are off-site!

And all the time we are picking the nitty and the gritty of the design, we are trying to keep to the big picture.  Or rather, the small picture. Because we are trying to make the inside of our home look bigger than the outside.

Like this guy did:

TardisAnd that’s going to influence all our decisions.

 

 

Living small on the West Coast

It’s not surprising that Vancouver might embrace the small-living model.  Pressed on three sides by water — the Fraser River and the harbour — there’s no place to go but deeper, making more homes in less space.

Reliance Properties has won praise for its innovative makeover of the historic Burns Building in our city’s Downtown Eastside.

The suites, which range in size from 226 to 291 square feet, go for an average of $850 per month, including cable and internet.

Yes, in Vancouver, $850 a month is quite a reasonable price to pay for less than 300 square feet.

And they’re cute, too!

BurnsBlock

The surprising thing for me is that there’s a movement in our neighbouring suburb of Surrey for microsuites.  Surrey is huge, with lots of wide open spaces.  But homes here are still out of most people’s budget.  To increase affordability even more than density, Surrey is selling suites for prices even people earning $17 an hour can purchase.

With prices as low as $109,900, the project is designed for first-time home buyers lacking the income to afford the traditional larger home.

Once again, there’s no sacrifice of style in these units.

BALANCEClosedBed

No doubt about it in my mind — small has a place everywhere.

Cubbies and crannies make cozy comfort

We are currently packing/winnowing our belongings for our move to our temporary home–and putting some things away for “deep storage” — only to be opened once we are in our laneway home.  Christmas decorations; vases; my collection of insulators(yep, you heard right, insulators); my “good” dishes and crystal; you know, stuff you only use once in a while.

But why keep them at all?  If you only use them once in a while, or if they are not useful (i.e. insulators), why keep them?

Because they hold meaning for me.

In our new place, we will have very limited storage for clothes — one closet shared by two people.  We are hoping to have some shelves to store some things like jewellery, hats and accessories, but for the most part the closet will be the total of our clothes storage.  This is not such a big deal to me.  I am not that interested in clothes. And shoes?  I was able to clear out half my shoe cupboard because I discovered four pairs of identical low-heeled black pumps, and near-duplicates of every other pair of shoes I own.  A small closet will be fine for me.

On the other hand, the metrosexual I married loves clothes.  He also dresses carefully, takes excellent care of his clothes and shoes, accessorizes thoughtfully.  He will cringe when it comes to sharing a closet.  And he will find a way to store everything he really wants to keep.

That’s the point I am trying to make.  You get rid of a lot of things, but you will find a way to keep everything you really love.

Like in this apartment.

Books1

Just 240 square feet, you’ll see art on the walls and books every where.  Even in a little cubby library off the lofted bedroom.

Books2Adorable, non?  And almost magical, in a Narnian kind of way.

What is it you couldn’t give up? Not in a “one minute to leave a burning building” situation, but where you could only take the most precious of your belongings?

 

The skinny on a West Coast Urban Longhouse

Pam Chilton is a residential building designer and owner of Zimba Design. Recently, a home design of hers won a B.C. Wood Design Award for innovative use of wood in the construction of a home in North Vancouver.

But I don’t think that was the most interesting part of the this handsome little house.  The “Urban Longhouse” is only 15 feet wide — and those are the exterior dimensions!

UrbanLonghouseExt

 

The use of wood plus up-to-the-minute construction techniques allowed them to make the home stylish and comfortable, and it is great to see how they managed to match the ambience of the neighbourhood — embracing both modern and traditional designs.

The trick was building the home on a lot that was just 25 feet wide.

Inside the use of natural materials was continued — as were the clean lines.

UrbanLonghouseInt

 

Read Pam Chilton’s article in BC Living to get the whole story.

Once again, the strict parameters of the design lead to creativity and innovation.  Well done, and congratulations not just to Zimba Design, but to the lucky home owners who can enjoy this house!

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