New York – NYC Museum Exhibit Shows Virtues Of Living Small

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    Challie Stillman, left, points out storage space to visitors of the Museum of the City of New York during the "Making Room: New Models for Housing New Yorkers," exhibit, Saturday, Aug. 17, 2013. Stillman and her partner Lina Franco are spending 24-hours in the 325-square-foot micro-unit apartment.(AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)New York – Many New Yorkers live in small apartments, yet most of them don’t camp out in a micro-unit at a museum in order to demonstrate the virtues of living in tight spaces.

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    Challie Stillman and Lina Franco arrived at the Museum of the City of New York at 6 p.m. Friday for a 24-hour stay in a studio apartment that’s part of an exhibit called “Making Room: New Models for Housing New Yorkers.”

    The exhibit, which runs through Sept. 2, also features designs that were submitted to a small-apartment competition announced by Mayor Michael Bloomberg last year.

    Stillman and Franco normally live in a 650-square-foot apartment in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn. The museum’s 325-square-foot studio is half that size but seems spacious because of the specially designed furniture and appliances.

    The murphy bed includes a couch that slides under when the bed is out of the wall. A chair converts to a stepladder for reaching storage spaces.

    The kitchen’s under-the-counter refrigerator, freezer and dishwasher leave ample work space. Stillman and Franco invited six friends for dinner Friday, but they had food delivered because the appliances are not hooked up.

    “Everyone had a place to sit, had a place to eat, and it worked out perfectly,” said Stillman, who is the design director for Resource Furniture, the distributor of the furniture in the apartment.

    Stillman said it would be possible for two people to live in the apartment for real.

    “You’d have to edit your belongings, definitely,” she said. “And also, you have to be neat. Everything has to have its place, and if it’s not in its place, and it’s messy in here, you’re going to start to get agitated.”
    Visitors to the Museum of the City of New York inspect the bathroom during the "Making Room: New Models for Housing New Yorkers," exhibit, Saturday, Aug. 17, 2013. Lina Franco and her partner Challie Stillman are spending 24-hours in the 325-square-foot micro-unit apartment. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)
    Her partner, Franco, a lawyer, couldn’t quite see living in the micro-apartment.

    “We would need a little more closet space,” she said. “We’re both girls and we have clothes. And shoes.”

    Visitors to the exhibit Saturday said they were impressed.

    “I would totally live in that apartment if I were on my own,” said Rebecca Hersh of Highland Park, N.J., who was accompanied by her mother, Pam, and her two children, ages 6 and 4. “It’s all about good design.”

    Museum-goer Gloria Feibus said she has an actual 300-square-foot Manhattan apartment and it’s fine.

    “The only thing I don’t have is a dishwasher, and I’m a built-in dishwasher,” she said.
    ____

    Online: http://www.mcny.org/exhibitions/current/Making-Room.html

    Challie Stillman, left, speaks to Yolanda Concepcion in the kitchen area during the "Making Room: New Models for Housing New Yorkers," exhibit at the Museum of the City of New York, Saturday, Aug. 17, 2013. Stillman and her partner Lina Franco are spending 24 hours in the 325-square-foot micro-unit apartment. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)


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    5 Comments
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    ModernLakewoodGuy
    ModernLakewoodGuy
    10 years ago

    Very refreshing in an era of must have 3,500 sq ft homes with 6 bedrooms, 5 bath, granite counters, two ovens, two sinks, two dishwashers, two kitchens, a study, play room, guest room, library, etc. Yes Lakeood Developments, I am looking at you.

    NaarYisroel
    NaarYisroel
    10 years ago

    There is nothing inappropriate in this article per se. But the more times that we see things like Challie Stillman and her partner Lina Franco, we grow more accustomed to the idea. It begins to sound normal.
    I think that a frum website should not have any hand in the moral decline of the world, even in such an oblique way such as this article.