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Decor Ideas and Space-Saving Tips for Urban Dwellers

Category Advice

In cities all over the world, the demand for urban living has increased faster than the supply of urban spaces. And Cape Town has not been exempt from this trend. 

When spaces are not defined by hard lines as well as by changes in materiality or texture and instead flow from one to the other, it gives the resident freedom to use the space however and for whatever they want.

With the sea and mountain placing a geographic limit on how far the city can sprawl, urban space has become a scarce commodity. The result is that urban dwellers have had to look at ways of doing more with less.

Jacques van Embden, MD and Co-Founder of urban property development company, Blok, says urban living today is all about “embracing minimalism – reducing non-essentials without sacrificing comfort or luxury”.
 

He says some ways of doing this include taking advantage of the dual functionality of spaces, employing effective and unobtrusive storage solutions, utilising multipurpose furniture, doing away with rooms that serve only a single role and making the most of communal spaces. 

Jacques shares some tips…

1. Use one area for multiple tasks

According to Jacques, multiuse spaces that offer a homeowner more than one solution are imperative to urban living. He says people demand more from their space, and the home needs to respond to this need.
 

Jacques says to maximise the amplitude of an urban home, transform its ‘third spaces’, those areas that are otherwise passive, into functional features. For example, he says a passage or the gap underneath a staircase can be converted into a small office, reading nook or bar.

2. Invest in smart storage

Whether you have knives hanging on a magnetic strip on the kitchen wall, drawers beneath beds or Lazy Susan-style shelving, keeping clutter cleverly cleared away can optimise the space available and enhance its usability.

3. Spend on flexible furniture

From a couch that has a dinner table extension to upholstered chests that serve as both seating and storage, Jacques says furniture designers are taking note of the needs of urban inhabitants and are creating products that enable a myriad of uses. 

What’s more, he says instead of overprescribing a space by having large bulky furniture, opt for a few smaller modular pieces that can either be combined or separated. For example, rather than having one big coffee table, get two smaller ones which can be pushed together or used individually as required, he says.

From a couch that has a dinner table extension to upholstered chests that serve as both seating and storage, furniture designers are taking note of the needs of urban inhabitants and are creating products that enable a myriad of uses.

4. Go for the open-plan option

Internationally, urban homes have increasingly featured open-plan design resulting in the trend of the ‘great room’ in and around which life is lived. 
 

Jacques says when spaces are not defined by hard lines as well as by changes in materiality or texture and instead flow from one to the other, it gives the resident freedom to use the space however and for whatever they want.

5. Communal is key

According to Jacques, a home shouldn’t stop at the front door. He says making use of shared spaces helps to reduce the requirement of one’s own resources and at the same time fosters a sense of community among city dwellers.

Urbanist, Director at Future Cape Town and CEO of Future Cities, Rashiq Fataar, says due to the limits of available land in well-located parts of the city, we need to reconfigure spaces and homes to be more compact but also to be used for more practical needs such as storing a bicycle, having friends for dinner and so forth.
 

The abundance of public parks and spaces in Cape Town, as well as improving public transport, greatly reduces the opportunity cost of residing in smaller spaces, he says.

Article courtesy of Property 24

Author: Property 24

Submitted 20 Feb 17 / Views 1994