文章來(lái)源:未知 文章作者:enread 發(fā)布時(shí)間:2016-01-03 07:07 字體: [大 中 小] 進(jìn)入論壇
(單詞翻譯:雙擊或拖選)
The apartments in a new Manhattan building boast little balconies, tall ceilings, dishwashers and storage space. All in 360 square feet or less.
這是一棟位于曼哈頓的新建公寓樓,號(hào)稱陽(yáng)臺(tái)小巧、垂直空間大,洗碗機(jī)、儲(chǔ)藏室一應(yīng)俱全。不過(guò)其中面積最大的公寓也只有360平方英尺(約合33平方米)。
It's micro-living in the nation's biggest city, and New Yorkers could be seeing more of it. Planning officials are proposing to end a limit on how small apartments can be, opening the door for more "micro-apartments" that advocates see as affordable adaptations to a growing population of single people.
At Carmel Place, the Manhattan building that marks the city's first experiment in decades with building super-small dwellings, the pitch is that little can be just enough.
"An efficiently designed micro-unit," says developer Tobias Oriwol, "is just a nice apartment."
Due to open early next year, Carmel Place features 55 apartments ranging from 265 to 360 square feet. By comparison, a typical one-car garage can be about 200 square feet.
As an experimental project, Carmel Place got city land and a waiver from New York's 400-square-foot minimum on new apartments, set in 1987. A proposed elimination of that minimum would allow smaller studios in buildings with a mix of apartment sizes, but entire micro-unit buildings would continue to need waivers.
"For us, it was really important to demonstrate how small space could be an enhancement to quality of life," said Christopher Bledsoe of Stage 3 Properties, which designed the interiors andamenities at Carmel Place.