[해피라이프 집,사람] 건축일을 하는 남편이 부부만을 위한 공간을 직접! 1층에 위치한 거실 2층은 화장실과 부부의 침실 3층은 이제 막 성인이 된 딸의 방 하지만, 코로나19로 인해 2인용 집에 현재 4식구가 살게 되었다는.. 게다가 반려견 토리까지~ 그래서 작지만 넓어 보이는 설계를 매일 마다 수정의 수정~! 짜투리 공간을 활용한 수납이 돋보이는 숲세권 협소주택★ 20200811
I agree with you. The Japanese micro house include much more than the effective uses of space and the homeowner had forgotten a lot of things as I can explain what those are.The South Korea is getting there I'm sure. But, the Japan is certainly ahead of the game when it comes to micro living. They call them 'Kyosho Jutaku' in Japan and literally thousands of Japanese Architects seriously study these things everyday. Because in Japan, similar to the South Korea, land means everything since the Islands are small and every single square feet counts. But, all the pieces have fit together starting with the location and the size of the lot where you want to build them. Also, keeping the cost of these micro dwellings low is mandatory because if they're costly, no one would want to live in there. So the cost should be a lot lower than the average South Korean homes. Ergonomically speaking, understanding the locations of the windows and the front and back door along with how many floors you can have for that specific construction site is very important. And how the home or the apartment looks like shouldn't destroy the nearby sceneries of the buildings or the homes in totality. After all, the most difficult thing to do is not building a micro homes or the micro apartments. The most difficult thing to do is city planning and therein lies the secret of creating peaceful neighborhood. The Kyosho Jutaku is not something the average Koreans or the Americans think at all. They are the final products of years and years of research and study focusing on strategic precision engineering and the ergonomics. If you are a builder with an architect, you must consider the height of the ceiling inside of these rooms. Because human beings do not feel small space small when the ceiling is high. There's day and night difference between being in a room with 3 meters high and 4 to 5 meters high and the architects must understand the feeling of being in that room(living room, bedroom and bathroom have different height of ceilings) before they build it. That's a very helpful natural human response the Japanese had discovered while studying human behavior. This means the smaller the room is, the higher the ceiling has to be so that the dwellers doesn't feel cramped or claustrophobic. They had also discovered that the manipulation of the light helps you to overcome living in small spaces. Which means, plenty of natural lights will help you feel larger living in small spaces. That means the architects must understand where the sun rises and sets before they can build anything on that specific lot where the future homeowner wants to build. I hope the South Korea gets rid of the Goshiwon rooms with no windows, Zzok-bangs, Oak-top-bangs and low ceiling One Rooms because these failed projects can cause the renters and the college students to set up the fire where they live or sometimes even commit suicide because they feel their rooms are too small. Nobody would want to live in human habitats feeling like they're living in prison cells. And these are not even any prison cells but legitimate human habitats where they spend their own money. Whenever the poor renters complain about the rooms being too small or not even having a window, the owners or the managers tell them they are lucky to even to find the places such as theirs blaming the structural problems of these housings as the problems of the society. Because if you haven't figured these out(heights and manipulation of lights), you haven't figured out anything about micro living. Here are a few clips to help your understanding. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-TYVJbupG3Xg.html and ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-hOyM1DqZOuo.html