Everyone is complaining how small these apartments are. What do you expect? San Francisco is incredibly expensive. What a bigger place in SF? Get ready to pay a whole lot more.
"I always found if you're in your living room that it's intrinsically depressing to look at a toaster oven" Hell no, what's depressing is to be confined in 160sq feet.
Not to mention the limited space of the _built environment_ reduces your mobility, potentially leading to a sedentary lifestyle chock full of potential future health problems.
Motox 2 & Y'all...want to see pics of unit with the TOILET inside the bedroom? No joke. No living room or kitchen in the unit. See photos at seattle . curbed . com Title: "U District micro-apartment: affordable steal or ‘prison cell’?"
@@Well_possibly, better or worse than the prison cell in which Jeffery Epstein _killed_ himself? There was a video feed of El Chapo's digs in the same facility. It featured one-piece stainless steel sink and toilet combo. It looked easy to clean, but is too institutional for my tastes.
It sounds strange, but i think someone should consider doing a version of this for retired people. People who no longer need a full house and want to simplify their existence but don't want to be in the usual old folk's home.
+MakeMeThinkAgain That is the idea. That homes/apartments should be built for all stages in life. We don't need all of our homes to be built big enough to fit an entire family. Instead of the "just in case" mentality, we can build more customized to different stages of life (single, family, empty nesters).
Your comment makes me wish Kirsten would go to some of those Scandinavian countries to check out how some of those cities have brought college students together with the geriatric population to see first hand how that might benefit both seniors and students. Currently living in a town that is largely geriatric I definitely tend to notice, at least in America, that we warehouse these people that have a lifetime (literally) of experience and insight that seems to go largely to waste in their later years. Certainly not an enviable state of affairs and maybe even one that deserves to be changed.
@@kawaiidere1023 Some items are high end to justify the ridiculously small footprint, but those items are bought once. This man is a horror!! They don't have plugs for laptops because they literally don't want to pay for electricity in their main lounge area. In the same breath he talks about them needing an escape from their small apartments, but creating uncomfortable furniture in that escape so they won't stay and lounge around. In the beginning you can appreciate it, because you think he is trying to make a difference in an over-priced market.... Then you realize that HE is the problem!! It's about making things as small as possible to collect the highest rent. Now they figured out instead of 1 bedrooms, you can eliminate a kitchen and bath,( initial investment lower ), by providing 2 individual bedrooms. If the lounge had really been made for an escape you might enjoy living here, but as it is the one comfort that was intentionally held back would just make you resent the place.
"We wanted to make very sticky social spaces" less than a minute later "We also deliberately made all the furniture uncomfortable." Oh...so you don't know what "sticky social space" really means do you...(hint, probably where people are _comfortable_ and want to be in...)
We need to fight for codes to keep apartments livable !!!! Look up this article with pics of the ***toilet inside the bedroom!*** No walls to the bathroom!!! Article title: U District micro-apartment: affordable steal or ‘prison cell’? You don't even get a kitchenette in your unit. Some looks like black bars across the bottom section of each window..... ......in keeping with that prison motif.
Craziest thing he said - they have common rooms so that people can mingle (and get out of their tiny cans) but he deliberately made the furniture uncomfortable!?!?
+03studios I felt the same way. The whole concept is very dystopian, with humans being packed into an absolute minimum amount of space. This guy also talks a lot about controlling and manipulating human behavior, as if his tenants were rats in a science experiment. The really depressing thing is that these micro-apartments cost more than renting a full-sized house in many other parts of the country. He also mentioned that 42% of San Franciscans live alone, which is pretty depressing in and of itself.
It's a choice. There is not enough space in San Francisco for all the people who want to live there so it makes sense to build smaller and offer more units for the people who don't need as much space. As for his "Skinnerian complex", that is what every building designer does- thinks about how the space will be used and makes decisions- he's just more verbal about it.
Kirsten Dirksen Yes, it's definitely a choice. No one is holding a gun to anyone's head forcing them to live in San Francisco, or to pay insane rent prices for tiny apartments. I guess my sentiment speaks more to the larger trend of over-compartmentalizing people. However, as the dollar grows ever weaker, and more people find themselves unemployed or underemployed, and inflation creeps ever higher... these are the inevitable choices that people will make in order to cope.
+shut up & hike I personally think what it lacks is people and their lifes, tastes, personal belongings inside. It was not inhabited for the most part, so it lacks the best part of it... People themselves! But that's not a fault, it's utility. I wouldn't like an apartment building to chase me with stuff and colours even before I move there.
Exactly! Where is your dog? No dog? No thank you! Where is your grass? Your mailbox, your flower beds? Where is your Christmas tree? Your dining room table? Your piano, your patio, your bath tub? This little box is not what most aspire to. It's fine... for students... but it's not conducive to family life.
Great to see that someone is doing research on micro units. Lots to learn about basic needs. I must say that the tiny lavatory in the bathroom is NEVER adequate. Too much like being in a restroom on a train or plane. Q: What does the suite rent for in 2019? (beginning at 5:45)
This looks like a psychology experiment to study the long term affects of living in a cubicle. I wonder if they have suicide nets outside the building...
To all the people commenting about the high cost of rent in San Francisco, I've made a few comments about why supply is so restricted (mainly the anti-growth focus of the city), but I also want to bring up my friend Johnny’s ongoing research into alternatives to the most popular cities. He’s written a lot about the 2nd tier cities (as far as rents go) like Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Louisville and what he calls “an archipelago of West Berlins” across the country. granolashotgun.com/2015/10/04/an-archipelago-of-west-berlins/ “As market demand for vibrant, convivial, walkable places overwhelms the limited supply people are having to make tough choices. A generation ago people who preferred a neighborhood with a functional public realm moved to Boston, Portland, Toronto, D.C., Vancouver, or Brooklyn. There were always trade offs to these locations, but on the whole folks were able to find some version of what they wanted at a manageable price. Today? Not so much. Real estate costs in top tier cities have become prohibitive.” … “All across the interior of the continent there are depopulated half forgotten remnants of once great cities and towns that have all the same qualities as premium cities, but at rock bottom prices… There are modest shotgun homes for sale in transitional neighborhoods in Louisville for under $60,000… Louisville’s historic neighborhoods are part of what I’ve come to think of as an archipelago of West Berlins that stretches from the Great Lakes, down into the southern Midwest, and flirts with Appalachia. Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Louisville… These are some of the islands in the chain. They float in a sea of banal suburbs and rural hinterlands.”
+Kirsten Dirksen Yup. I've lived my whole life in NYC and Los Angeles, after growing up in NW Washington, D.C. All were very expensive. Now, my wife and I are moving to Memphis, TN. To purchase a home in our neighborhood in L.A. it is easy to pay over $1,000 per sq. ft, and in Memphis we can buy a beautiful home for *under* $100 per sq. ft. It's insane.
+godfatherNYC Smart. Why do we all want to be where everyone else is. And what's more, why do we feel we have a "right" to be there. There are so many other places to live, ways to live. I hope you enjoy the move.
+Kirsten Dirksen Thanks :) I've got my wife and our 4 year-old son, and that's what makes me truly happy in life. I'm looking forward to much more space, and peace and quiet. Also we have family there too now, my Mom moved there 10 years ago and my Aunt and Cousins are from there and still live there. It's gonna be fun! And we hope to (gently) encourage (or hopefully just inspire) people we meet there to conserve, recycle, reuse, etc. We did learn some cool things living in the big cities that we can pass along. Thanks for responding, I LOVE your channel!!!
+Kirsten Dirksen Seems that the solution is to build more places like the ones we love, rather than add more people into them. Not everywhere can or should be a NYC or SF, but they can be a lot better than the suburban mess that litters places like the Silicon Valley. Also, his wet bathroom prototype missed some of the finer points on how to construct and use a wet bathroom. Tips: don't put the toilet and bathroom sink in the same room with the shower (avoids needing the curtain) and don't wear shoes inside the apartment (avoids getting them dirty - but one usually doesn't wear shoes in the bathtub anyway).
Lonesome Rhodes, your comment is one of the best. You've summed it up well. Where I used to live, they required developers to build a minimum number of affordable housing units for x number of market rate. (State or county requirement...I'm not sure which.) We need to push for that, plus rent control, imho.
There is some interesting design features here but some really bizarre ideas about "herding people" into certain activities. I mean designing a common room for people to gather in with furniture that isn't comfortable seems like a contradiction. You want people to gather together bit sit on furniture that is not comfortable? Maybe this guy could open a restaurant that serves food that does not taste so good so people won't eat too much... hahahah
+Test Channel 1 There was coffee shop in my college yrs called "Sambo's" where they painted everything purple and orange, researched as being most unappetizing colors. Reason was so tables would turn over faster.
That’s an actual thing grocery stores do also so people GTFO as soon as possible, bright fluorescent lights and horrible music. It definitely makes me leave ASAP
Yeah, weird choice among a video of great ideas... The way I see a social scene developing is if you build a place with plenty of resources to help someone come down and work... Chargers, comfy seats & workstations, free coffee... and a culture developing through that. Anyway...
Wow!!! A heated Uber bench. You know what would be a thousand times more useful? A pull over area for Uber drivers so they don’t have to impede traffic while waiting for a rider.
ding,ding,ding ... we have a winner. A free thinking, living, breathing human being. Now I will tell you why the don't make cutouts so Uber's don't impede traffic. The control freak, commie, globalist minions actually desire traffic problems. Why is that ? In short, they are all about controlling your every movement and one aspect of that is to curtail your ability to travel. They hate personally owned automobiles, so they make driving as difficult as possible. You will never see a transportation plan that is designed for maximum throughput with the goal of making it as easy as possible for the most people to get from wherever they are to wherever they want to go. The design is to make driving a car as difficult as possible to discourage car ownership. Put the sheeple on a bicycle and now you have really cut down their range. You have successfully reigned in your population of slaves. See how it works ? I drive in San Francisco daily. I can see the globalist "utopia" they are constructing. It is a very low quality of life prison, which the overpaid techies have swarmed to. These entitled tech workers are the product of the globalist social engineering efforts and at least on some levels seem to enjoy their life in the packem and stackem urban dystopia that san francisco is becoming. However, the techies are also young and have a lot of money; at least they are paid a lot, but all that $$ goes to paying the astronomical rents in sf and servicing their student loans, which are sometimes equivalent to a mortgage in other parts of the country, ... so maybe it's better said they are young and have enough money left over to uber all over the city and party a lot, but not enough to ever hope to buy a home, own a car or escape their ultra high density urban dystopia. Just think about what life in the globalist planned future will be like for the other 95% who have much less money. Watch the classic sci-fi movie "Soylent Green" if you want a preview.
@@sfranger50 You're really silly. Socialist countries usually have lanes for buses and taxis to stop at, so that they can let out/take in passengers. Only in a hyper-capitalist place like America do we expect every individual to have a car and make no effort to think of other people's needs when it comes to transport. Bicycles? the fastest way to get through a city, bypassing automobile traffic. The prices in San Francisco? Decided by the capitalist market. Student loans? Something unique to America, as socialist countries pay for their students' higher education. Soylent Green is about capitalist wealth inequality (the 1%) creating a world where the rich profit off the poor by making them literally cannibalize each. Sort of a spin on Dracula, which is about the rich - represented by Dracula - being vampires who literally suck the blood from the poor to sustain themselves. These are metaphors for the ways rich people exploit poor people. Socialism is about addressing everyone's needs. Look at countries that have socialized medicine: no one goes bankrupt due to medical bills in Sweden.
I really like the concept. But living in a really tiny apartment (though bigger than these) for a few month I realized how much negative impact it had on my mental health. Living in such a matchbox you have to be really careful not to get depressed.
+Frederic Maurer. Thx for yr post. Thought it was just me. I have 284 sq ft, but only bed is comfortable (like these apts). I feel like a hospital patient most of the time.
Sidney Boo I have no idea what referring to Japan and China has to do with anything with regards to me noting his persona and delivery. Have a good day.
Raymond Flores, how about a bedroom with the toilet and shower inside it....no walls to hide them? They built them in Seattle. Photos at article at seattle . curbed . com titled: U District micro-apartment: affordable steal or ‘prison cell’? No kitchenette in the unit either. So sad! As a society, we've got to fight this and get affordable housing!
I used to live there and eventually had to leave b/c of the difficulty in finding affordable/available housing, I lived in some expensive tiny rooms with crazy ppl and not very good living conditions sometimes... so I totally appreciate what this guy is doing.
This seems to be a man that created a space he wouldn't be caught dead living in, kind of an "these idiots will pay for this and they'll like it" sort of vibe (which is not to say that people who want this style of living are idiots, just that the developer seems to have that attitude). "We also deliberately made all the furniture slightly uncomfortable." 😵
it's depressing because they remind me of institutionalized dorms the only people that could afford these are hipster students.. the average person won't live in these stupid places
@@Gamerad360 Yet, the provided link to his "smart spaces" is a 404. I'm not going to waste my time looking too far into it but I did a few searches and didn't find some magical $500/person small apartments under this guy's name. Either the waiting list is both private and likely as long as our lifetime or the prices skyrocketed such that the whole purpose was blown out. ...or, perhaps, the project just fell apart.
I feel like he is doing this because it's a good marketing opportunity. He does not seem that passionate about micro housing. Maybe that's not true but it kind of how he came across.
“Can be heated with a hair dryer” A hair dryer uses 1,500w. The exact same as a space heater. He’s saying the space is so small all you need is a one room heater but making it sound like some crazy efficiency by mentioning a hair dryer
My God, what have we become? That is so depressing. I'm not sure the six figure income is worth it. You can get a better quality of life in a much more rural area. There is something so dystopian about this.
Good video, it's sad to see my old house from outside the window and see what that neighborhood is turning into though, a bunch of sterile, overpriced apartments for techies. Didn't catch him mentioning a price but I'm sure it's over 1400 for one of those rooms. LOL at "affordable" housing in SF.
sadly he has created an extremely sterile environment. not one sofa or comfortable chair. Dormitories are more warm and inviting than this place. Where do you go to put you feet up after a hard day of work or school. You are forced to go to your bed. So say what you will. He has built a very sterile dorm. sad really
I agree with you 1000% if possible. I kept thinking, he couldn't even put some sofas in the common area. You know he probably has more then one sofa at his home. This project to me looks like a total fail.
This is one of the most interesting videos in the channel, not just because it's about SF, but because it gives and an investors's in-depth perspective. All the spaces look very well done. Love the rooftop BBQ zone and the bike parking. I would enjoy living in this building for a couple of years with some cool people, studying or working on a startup.
With the schools leasing the building it means that graduates will struggle to continue to live in the City. The whole point of the micro approach is to allow young professionals to stay urban.
I want to know if this man, politicians et al, the people with these ideas to pack people into cells for their living spaces, are people like this man and politicians pushing this kind of living, are THEY willing to live in these things? I can bet this man in the video has a very nice, very roomy living place in a really good part of SF.
I live in Tokyo now and have lived in LA in the past. I believe smaller apartments are the future for many in large cities like SF and LA. People freak out at the size but once you've lived this way its not really a big deal.
Yeah, somehow though they need to check how many people are actually living in a small space like that. It's not an intrusion but more of, to be used the way it's designed.
@@incognitotorpedo42 In Tokyo in the same size 4 million people fit comfortable. this is what happens when for 20 years Nimbys block all of the development
And also in Tokyo, you can rent a 800 sq ft two bedroom apartment for 1800 a month in the center or buy a 300k single family home around 1800sq ft in the suburbs. It is a simple supply and demand, If you build enough housing, prices won't be crazy.
I could tell him an RV wet bath does not work well in apartments. Many of the rooms look like a dorm room and a hospital room but at least he is trying with sample spaces. Folks also like to open their windows to get fresh air. He should take some tiny home designs and incorporate that into an apartment. I would recommend comfortable furniture in the open spaces and wifi is important all over because people like to get away and work in an open space not just a library space. How about spaces for scooters like Vespa's.
I LOVE the bike room!!! That is the one thing my place doesn't have. we do have an underground garage for cars, motorcycles, and bikes. The single units are good for older geezers, like me. We are a little bit more into privacy. We just need a few feet, but it should be a private few feet. In college we had 4 people in a 2 bedroom apartment. That was fine . . . then. I have long advocated for micro apartments at home in the USA. I am currently a digital nomad in SE Asia and have loved my apartments. I am in my third one as I travel from area to area (Bangkok-Kathmandu-Chiang Mai, so far). My apartments are in the 30-40 square meter size. They have 1 room + a bathroom. Easy to clean and cheap to heat/air condition. All I really need is a bed, kitchenette, office area, and a bathroom. For single people, this is fantastic. I have privacy for sleeping, quiet time, and working. When I am not doing those, I don't want to sit alone. So, I am semi-forced to go out to either the common areas of my complex (laundry room, fitness center, pool, lounge areas, outside benches), walk around my area (coffee houses, restaurants, convenience stores, specialty stores) or bike/taxi further for major events (church, board game nights, bicycling club, sight seeing, visiting friends, co-working places, major stores). I think I have more friends living this way than when I had one bedroom apartments in the USA. I plan to return to the USA in about 3 years and I hope micro apartments explode by then, especially in middle class areas for about $300/month. Come on America, we can do it! And, if that isn't done, I may just buy an RV to simulate a mobile micro apartment.
These apartments remind me of Japan. As a developer his design is clearly encouraging/forcing individuals into a way of living, thinking, and interacting. At a certain point and time in my life, I would've wanted to live in an apartment like that. But there seems to be no solitude, no place to be completely and utterly alone with your thoughts, in contrast with feeling abandoned and alone in a crowded space. Personally, I can't live in large cities anymore. For visits, maybe a week's stay, it would be exciting, but the constant droning of millions outside the glass, wears on me quickly.
Track mud in the bathroom?! Take your shoes off in the house. Wear shower sandals in the bathroom. Problem solved. That Euro-bath focuses on the need for utility in a small space. Perfect. Excellent concepts for livable spaces in all the overpopulated cities in the world. With outdoor spaces such as a small park and garden area surrounding this building, it would serve the needs of the mind as well as the body.
@@maria_casuscelli Per the video link in the above description section, he got his idea for building these units after living in an Airstream with his wife and daughter. That 2011 video has a segment of him giving a tour of his 78 square foot Airstream.
Well he probably wouldn't and there is nothing wrong with that. He is giving people what they WANT. He is just adapting to the market. I'm sure if he was in a position financially to need one he would.....
Wow. This is the reason I love this channel. As someone living outside of the city because of prices this is amazing. I already live a minimilastic life by choice and the design and location of this apartment complex is perfect. Are they building more? Can I get on a waiting list?
Yes! Pack em in like sardines so the developers can make more money! We need to efficiently store our minimum wage drone workers. To hell with privacy or quality of life...that's an upgrade. All lazy workers should be forced to work at stand up desks, and comfortable seats are only for the corporate masters.
This is the saddest thing I've seen in awhile. It's like Stepford 2016. It's as if they sucked all the life and vitality out of San Francisco, gave it a steel veneer and some technology on the side and shoved it into a vat. Sterile comes to mind, home does not. There is nothing engaging about the space even in the areas that are designated for it. It seems as if the entire building was designed for discomfort - Harsh angles, a sullen gray that permeates everything, no garage, forced everything. All the beauty and charm of San Francisco is totally absent from this property.
I loved the bicycle storage area, the clean air, & the package receiving station. (As a security guard my boss got fired when a package disappeared) I love the idea of persuading people: to use the stairs, sit & talk outside the elevator without gadgets, & the hard -uncomfortable chairs to keep people moving, plus the library type of room. hmm.. Why didn't they build the elevator outside the building like construction elevators? I guess the building had already been built & the host on the video just remodeled the inside. This is a big help for people that want to live this way. I don't like elevators because it used to take me 1/2 an hour just to drive out of the complex. Now I live in a small city with single family houses. I can get outside in less than 60 seconds.
Your building, approach and use of future-forward technology are comfortably modern and thoughtful. If there is one thing I would revisit for version 2.0, or some version, would be the "Area Sign" i.e., the light-tan or off-white signs with 2-3 lines of copy, E.g., "Reading Room 0111" see at 11:57 and elsewhere. I believe these are a missed opportunity for a creative and understated approach. They are also featured on every floor. I imagine themed "Area Signs" very subtle with unique color back-light and creative copy or themed copy, something more thoughtful and fun. I imagine new tenants being compelled to visit the other floors to view their theme. I imagine tenants meeting and saying "We live up on Bonsai"(the 9th floor) "Stop by. Can't miss it. But if you do....We are on the green floor with the Bonsai tree"...
this is a great "transitional" dorm - like apartment building for young adults/new college graduates. may have some life-long residents as well, but for the most part - it will likely be a good landing/launching pad for that transitional decade between college and "adulthood." here in chicago, we all lived in wrigleyville and put 3-4 people in each apartment after college for that transitional 4-5 years. its a great way to keep costs down those early years.
"I always thought that, if you were in your living room... It was depressing to look at a toaster oven." Me, laying in bed, looks up. There is my toaster over, about 7ish feet away. maybe 8. Idk. It's kind of nice to be able to keep an eye on the toaster while im in bed.
I'm impressed. Very well designed. Lots of space and natural light. That second apartment has thought of everything! Really nice! That stairwell and ceiling social area are amazing! Love his comment, "we didn't want it to look like we ran out of money when we came to the basement/garage".
One of the best videos I've seen on this channel so far. A professional tour and great solutions.Still I would change some things for optimal pricing and of course personal likings or needs, but hell - this is a real inspiration for anyone who will buy a small apartment.
Hoy! My 15 year old daughter wants to go to school and live in SF. Many people we talk to there say that she HAS to live outside the city and commute in. This looks like a fantastic affordable option. Thanks for showing this!
I really like the aesthetics of that building and the rooms. I also like the communal areas. I wouldn't mind having one of those myself, just not in SF.
I’m late to this. It’s clear he didn’t work with an interior designer. There are no soft or textured surfaces. The “great rooms” are definitely pass-through areas. It makes it seem like it forces residents to hang out in their rooms rather than gather in the living/dining/kitchen. The colors he chose are also hospital/office like. And those bread boards are a total waste of space. There are much better options to create a sturdy cutting surface/workspace in the kitchen, and the stupid bread boards can be stacked in a cabinet or hung on the wall. Some really weird choices.
+sportlol he said music conservatory was 5 min walk away - rehearsal space there - the bldg wasn't built for them - they just renting space after it built -
These awful the rooms have zero personality to them and homelessness its like coming home to student hall/hotel 🤢 Also a lot of these designers or people and companies that are making money out of this i bet don’t live in a micro apartment.
hotel was the feeling I had. I think it's helpful to have some stuff in there for starters or offer a selection for new residents to choose from, but having everything being furnished creates a lack of personality (like you said). I'm reminded of videos of people living in their vans with multifunction couches etc. That's nice and all but what if I wanted a different bench by the window? It sounds like a good bit is not customizable.
"Its intrinsically depressing to look at a toaster oven" I dont know why that made me lol but it did. These apartments are pretty awesome looking! Very modern! I hope austin, tx does something similar one day.
This is extremely sad, and it is part of San Francisco's housing and living issue. If you expect students to pay for a 150 square-feet apartment, then imagine how much the other companies and community-buildings are going to charge for a 400-560 square feet 1-bedroom apartment. This is why, in most big cities in the U.S today, you find ridiculous rents that vary anywhere from $1,700 to $2,200 for just a studio or a 340-540 square feet apartment, and that is not including the parking-cost (usually around $200.00 per vehicle). This averages to $2,000 to $2,500 just for a STUDIO OR A ONE BEDROOM. Companies continue to build mega-buildings with nice views thinking that is what people want, but people also need size, affordable rents, and flexible communities where they can have pets, or live with their partner, and be able to cook from home. America is becoming more and more violent in its capitalism, we don't want people to be obese or unhealthy but how can you expect them to cook in a 150 square feet building. Pathetic.
@@alquinn8576Yeah, good luck with cooking 3 meals a day in a 340 square feet apartment. I live in a 700 square feet (1 bedroom) apt, with stairs, and I still have a very hard time keeping such a small kitchen organized and clean, and not to mention your whole house smells when you cook and often gets filled of smoke everywhere. Seriously, good luck living there without losing your damn mind!
OMG poor you; you have it worse than the Donner Party. I find smaller spaces easier to keep clean. If you have too much clutter you are probably a hoarder. A good HEPA with an odor prefilter will keep the smells down, assuming you don't have a ventilation system in your kitchen. The Honywell filters are good for price vs efficacy. Also, pro tip: don't cook 3 meals a day; cook in batches occasionally instead.
This man is brilliant! I wish his ideas and enthusiasm is spread to other countries. Thank you Kirsten! Very-very interesting video: enjoyed every second of it!
This is too organized: The space cannot be changed. You can't put yourself into it. This apartment needs to be emptier to begin with so that you can put things where you want to put them: Table on this or this side, both work. Office either in this corner or that corner, both work, etc etc. Too restrictive.
I like the way of thinking for this building. In most appartement buildings you live on your own, here there is way more room for interaction and fun. It will make the place a lot more alive!
Wow, I'm so glad you talked to this maverick and kept tabs on him. I love so many of his ideas to create an effective user experience for living in SF, which is really tough. I can see students or young professionals living in a place like this because it offer personal space as well as a community space, which works really well together. I wish I saw more examples of using more plants to warm the space. I think veggie gardens would be great on the roof. I think I would be interested to know how recycling and composting could be considered in this urban building. I loved the transportation board and bike hub. I would be keen to see how this grows over time as it get more usage and see what special services can be added to make living there more attractive. Well done. I hope you do another film featuring Patrick Kennedy in another few years.
I would add a system to hang stuff on the walls without to have to nail anything. For hanging art, a rail could be put about and cables could be used to hang pictures at the desired hight. Or walls that you can pin stuff on. Or what if you want to put the TV on another wall. Is there a system of blinds? The windows are perfect to have plants, so a system of hooks to put up potted plants would be nice. Or a system with customized shelves. Also, the bed with the drawers underneath needs to glide seamlessly just as the kitchen drawers.
The funniest and most ironic part is the hipsters moving into these sardine cans will most likely badmouth what they call "flyover states" where master bathrooms are bigger than their depressing apartment cells.
Everyone is complaining how small these apartments are. What do you expect? San Francisco is incredibly expensive. What a bigger place in SF? Get ready to pay a whole lot more.
"I always found if you're in your living room that it's intrinsically depressing to look at a toaster oven" Hell no, what's depressing is to be confined in 160sq feet.
Not to mention the limited space of the _built environment_ reduces your mobility, potentially leading to a sedentary lifestyle chock full of potential future health problems.
Motox 2 & Y'all...want to see pics of unit with the TOILET inside the bedroom? No joke. No living room or kitchen in the unit.
See photos at seattle . curbed . com Title:
"U District micro-apartment: affordable steal or ‘prison cell’?"
@@Well_possibly, better or worse than the prison cell in which Jeffery Epstein _killed_ himself? There was a video feed of El Chapo's digs in the same facility. It featured one-piece stainless steel sink and toilet combo. It looked easy to clean, but is too institutional for my tastes.
Motox 2 😂
...and not have been sentenced to it.
It sounds strange, but i think someone should consider doing a version of this for retired people. People who no longer need a full house and want to simplify their existence but don't want to be in the usual old folk's home.
+MakeMeThinkAgain That is the idea. That homes/apartments should be built for all stages in life. We don't need all of our homes to be built big enough to fit an entire family. Instead of the "just in case" mentality, we can build more customized to different stages of life (single, family, empty nesters).
Your comment makes me wish Kirsten would go to some of those Scandinavian countries to check out how some of those cities have brought college students together with the geriatric population to see first hand how that might benefit both seniors and students. Currently living in a town that is largely geriatric I definitely tend to notice, at least in America, that we warehouse these people that have a lifetime (literally) of experience and insight that seems to go largely to waste in their later years. Certainly not an enviable state of affairs and maybe even one that deserves to be changed.
Robert Sinton I think it makes even more sense to mix the elderly with young families.
Yeah, because I want to hear a bunch of kids screaming their fucking heads off at all hours! Stupid twat.
MakeMeThinkAgain k
"We deliberately made all the furniture slightly uncomfortable" - kill me. It's so sterile looking, and uncomfortable to boot?
I thought the same thing. Who wants to hang out in a stone hard warehouse?
exactly. you want warmth in your home
"We don't have any outlets cause we want people to rely on oldschool technology." Where is anyone going to plug their laptop in for work? smh my head
@@kawaiidere1023
Some items are high end to justify the ridiculously small footprint, but those items are bought once.
This man is a horror!! They don't have plugs for laptops because they literally don't want to pay for electricity in their main lounge area. In the same breath he talks about them needing an escape from their small apartments, but creating uncomfortable furniture in that escape so they won't stay and lounge around.
In the beginning you can appreciate it, because you think he is trying to make a difference in an over-priced market....
Then you realize that HE is the problem!!
It's about making things as small as possible to collect the highest rent. Now they figured out instead of 1 bedrooms, you can eliminate a kitchen and bath,( initial investment lower ), by providing 2 individual bedrooms.
If the lounge had really been made for an escape you might enjoy living here, but as it is the one comfort that was intentionally held back would just make you resent the place.
"We wanted to make very sticky social spaces"
less than a minute later
"We also deliberately made all the furniture uncomfortable."
Oh...so you don't know what "sticky social space" really means do you...(hint, probably where people are _comfortable_ and want to be in...)
I’m laughing at this.... dumb dumb
We need to fight for codes to keep apartments livable !!!! Look up this article with pics of the ***toilet inside the bedroom!*** No walls to the bathroom!!!
Article title: U District micro-apartment: affordable steal or ‘prison cell’?
You don't even get a kitchenette in your unit. Some looks like black bars across the bottom section of each window.....
......in keeping with that prison motif.
Craziest thing he said - they have common rooms so that people can mingle (and get out of their tiny cans) but he deliberately made the furniture uncomfortable!?!?
He meant to dissuade comfort cats to not be there at all times n stride
Makes sense.
If you sit by a QSR restaurant, the same concept design applies
So true
Even though this is a really well made space, its depressing for some reason, I just cant put my finger on why
+03studios Very high utility and lack of soul. It's like living at the office
+03studios I felt the same way. The whole concept is very dystopian, with humans being packed into an absolute minimum amount of space. This guy also talks a lot about controlling and manipulating human behavior, as if his tenants were rats in a science experiment. The really depressing thing is that these micro-apartments cost more than renting a full-sized house in many other parts of the country. He also mentioned that 42% of San Franciscans live alone, which is pretty depressing in and of itself.
It's a choice. There is not enough space in San Francisco for all the people who want to live there so it makes sense to build smaller and offer more units for the people who don't need as much space. As for his "Skinnerian complex", that is what every building designer does- thinks about how the space will be used and makes decisions- he's just more verbal about it.
Kirsten Dirksen Yes, it's definitely a choice. No one is holding a gun to anyone's head forcing them to live in San Francisco, or to pay insane rent prices for tiny apartments. I guess my sentiment speaks more to the larger trend of over-compartmentalizing people. However, as the dollar grows ever weaker, and more people find themselves unemployed or underemployed, and inflation creeps ever higher... these are the inevitable choices that people will make in order to cope.
+shut up & hike I personally think what it lacks is people and their lifes, tastes, personal belongings inside. It was not inhabited for the most part, so it lacks the best part of it... People themselves! But that's not a fault, it's utility. I wouldn't like an apartment building to chase me with stuff and colours even before I move there.
This is not the future I used to dream of when I was young.
Exactly! Where is your dog? No dog? No thank you! Where is your grass? Your mailbox, your flower beds? Where is your Christmas tree? Your dining room table? Your piano, your patio, your bath tub? This little box is not what most aspire to. It's fine... for students... but it's not conducive to family life.
Great to see that someone is doing research on micro units. Lots to learn about basic needs. I must say that the tiny lavatory in the bathroom is NEVER adequate. Too much like being in a restroom on a train or plane. Q: What does the suite rent for in 2019? (beginning at 5:45)
They do this in China's large cities.
Hard to get used, thought
“There’s nothing more depressing than seeing your mop and broom out”. No sir, there’s nothing more depressing than paying so much for so little.
Wonder where the storage space is for your dirty laundry
i know I am kinda randomly asking but does anyone know a good website to watch new tv shows online ?
@Nehemiah Kylan flixportal :P
@Creed Dax thank you, I went there and it seems like a nice service :) I appreciate it !
@Nehemiah Kylan No problem :D
This looks like a psychology experiment to study the long term affects of living in a cubicle. I wonder if they have suicide nets outside the building...
Pac Oo
Don't need experiments. There are entire cities in Asia like this.
🤣🤣🤣🤣Suicide nets--that's awesome. I also like the comment about these units looking like prison cells in Norway.
Kind of similar to those rat tests they did in the 70's.
Yep lab rats except YOU pay them to participate.
That “reading room” is so cold, uncomfortable and sterile looking. Doubt it will get much use.
apart from the design aesthetic to the apartment space itself, this is actually pretty dope
To all the people commenting about the high cost of rent in San Francisco, I've made a few comments about why supply is so restricted (mainly the anti-growth focus of the city), but I also want to bring up my friend Johnny’s ongoing research into alternatives to the most popular cities. He’s written a lot about the 2nd tier cities (as far as rents go) like Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Louisville and what he calls “an archipelago of West Berlins” across the country.
granolashotgun.com/2015/10/04/an-archipelago-of-west-berlins/
“As market demand for vibrant, convivial, walkable places overwhelms the limited supply people are having to make tough choices. A generation ago people who preferred a neighborhood with a functional public realm moved to Boston, Portland, Toronto, D.C., Vancouver, or Brooklyn. There were always trade offs to these locations, but on the whole folks were able to find some version of what they wanted at a manageable price. Today? Not so much. Real estate costs in top tier cities have become prohibitive.”
…
“All across the interior of the continent there are depopulated half forgotten remnants of once great cities and towns that have all the same qualities as premium cities, but at rock bottom prices… There are modest shotgun homes for sale in transitional neighborhoods in Louisville for under $60,000… Louisville’s historic neighborhoods are part of what I’ve come to think of as an archipelago of West Berlins that stretches from the Great Lakes, down into the southern Midwest, and flirts with Appalachia. Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Louisville… These are some of the islands in the chain. They float in a sea of banal suburbs and rural hinterlands.”
+Kirsten Dirksen Yup. I've lived my whole life in NYC and Los Angeles, after growing up in NW Washington, D.C. All were very expensive. Now, my wife and I are moving to Memphis, TN. To purchase a home in our neighborhood in L.A. it is easy to pay over $1,000 per sq. ft, and in Memphis we can buy a beautiful home for *under* $100 per sq. ft. It's insane.
+godfatherNYC Smart. Why do we all want to be where everyone else is. And what's more, why do we feel we have a "right" to be there. There are so many other places to live, ways to live. I hope you enjoy the move.
+Kirsten Dirksen Thanks :) I've got my wife and our 4 year-old son, and that's what makes me truly happy in life. I'm looking forward to much more space, and peace and quiet. Also we have family there too now, my Mom moved there 10 years ago and my Aunt and Cousins are from there and still live there. It's gonna be fun! And we hope to (gently) encourage (or hopefully just inspire) people we meet there to conserve, recycle, reuse, etc. We did learn some cool things living in the big cities that we can pass along. Thanks for responding, I LOVE your channel!!!
+Kirsten Dirksen Seems that the solution is to build more places like the ones we love, rather than add more people into them. Not everywhere can or should be a NYC or SF, but they can be a lot better than the suburban mess that litters places like the Silicon Valley.
Also, his wet bathroom prototype missed some of the finer points on how to construct and use a wet bathroom. Tips: don't put the toilet and bathroom sink in the same room with the shower (avoids needing the curtain) and don't wear shoes inside the apartment (avoids getting them dirty - but one usually doesn't wear shoes in the bathtub anyway).
+Kirsten Dirksen It's going to all be down to price.
Extended dorm life, bleak human warehousing.
Lonesome Rhodes, your comment is one of the best. You've summed it up well.
Where I used to live, they required developers to build a minimum number of affordable housing units for x number of market rate. (State or county requirement...I'm not sure which.)
We need to push for that, plus rent control, imho.
Great idea!! Its STILL in SF, so I'm pretty sure the cost is still SUPER JAW DROPPING !!!
There is some interesting design features here but some really bizarre ideas about "herding people" into certain activities. I mean designing a common room for people to gather in with furniture that isn't comfortable seems like a contradiction. You want people to gather together bit sit on furniture that is not comfortable? Maybe this guy could open a restaurant that serves food that does not taste so good so people won't eat too much... hahahah
Haha, yeah! 😅
"We deliberately make all our food slightly too cold so that people eat quickly and leave the restaurant."
That would probably work in San Francisco
+Test Channel 1 There was coffee shop in my college yrs called "Sambo's" where they painted everything purple and orange, researched as being most unappetizing colors. Reason was so tables would turn over faster.
That’s an actual thing grocery stores do also so people GTFO as soon as possible, bright fluorescent lights and horrible music. It definitely makes me leave ASAP
Yeah, weird choice among a video of great ideas... The way I see a social scene developing is if you build a place with plenty of resources to help someone come down and work... Chargers, comfy seats & workstations, free coffee... and a culture developing through that. Anyway...
Wow!!! A heated Uber bench. You know what would be a thousand times more useful? A pull over area for Uber drivers so they don’t have to impede traffic while waiting for a rider.
ding,ding,ding ... we have a winner. A free thinking, living, breathing human being. Now I will tell you why the don't make cutouts so Uber's don't impede traffic. The control freak, commie, globalist minions actually desire traffic problems. Why is that ? In short, they are all about controlling your every movement and one aspect of that is to curtail your ability to travel. They hate personally owned automobiles, so they make driving as difficult as possible. You will never see a transportation plan that is designed for maximum throughput with the goal of making it as easy as possible for the most people to get from wherever they are to wherever they want to go. The design is to make driving a car as difficult as possible to discourage car ownership. Put the sheeple on a bicycle and now you have really cut down their range. You have successfully reigned in your population of slaves. See how it works ? I drive in San Francisco daily. I can see the globalist "utopia" they are constructing. It is a very low quality of life prison, which the overpaid techies have swarmed to. These entitled tech workers are the product of the globalist social engineering efforts and at least on some levels seem to enjoy their life in the packem and stackem urban dystopia that san francisco is becoming. However, the techies are also young and have a lot of money; at least they are paid a lot, but all that $$ goes to paying the astronomical rents in sf and servicing their student loans, which are sometimes equivalent to a mortgage in other parts of the country, ... so maybe it's better said they are young and have enough money left over to uber all over the city and party a lot, but not enough to ever hope to buy a home, own a car or escape their ultra high density urban dystopia. Just think about what life in the globalist planned future will be like for the other 95% who have much less money. Watch the classic sci-fi movie "Soylent Green" if you want a preview.
@@sfranger50 You're really silly. Socialist countries usually have lanes for buses and taxis to stop at, so that they can let out/take in passengers. Only in a hyper-capitalist place like America do we expect every individual to have a car and make no effort to think of other people's needs when it comes to transport.
Bicycles? the fastest way to get through a city, bypassing automobile traffic.
The prices in San Francisco? Decided by the capitalist market.
Student loans? Something unique to America, as socialist countries pay for their students' higher education.
Soylent Green is about capitalist wealth inequality (the 1%) creating a world where the rich profit off the poor by making them literally cannibalize each. Sort of a spin on Dracula, which is about the rich - represented by Dracula - being vampires who literally suck the blood from the poor to sustain themselves. These are metaphors for the ways rich people exploit poor people. Socialism is about addressing everyone's needs. Look at countries that have socialized medicine: no one goes bankrupt due to medical bills in Sweden.
I really like the concept. But living in a really tiny apartment (though bigger than these) for a few month I realized how much negative impact it had on my mental health. Living in such a matchbox you have to be really careful not to get depressed.
+Frederic Maurer. Thx for yr post. Thought it was just me. I have 284 sq ft, but only bed is comfortable (like these apts). I feel like a hospital patient most of the time.
Now let's see the architects house. No way that guy is living in one of these shoe boxes. It looks like a new age slave quarters.
cattalkbmx Exactly. Nothing he says sounds sincere or connected to humanity.
yall want free colleg say hello to agenda 21s free housing
You obviously havent seen Japan's housing or Chinas
Sidney Boo I have no idea what referring to Japan and China has to do with anything with regards to me noting his persona and delivery. Have a good day.
Raymond Flores, how about a bedroom with the toilet and shower inside it....no walls to hide them? They built them in Seattle.
Photos at article at seattle . curbed . com titled:
U District micro-apartment: affordable steal or ‘prison cell’?
No kitchenette in the unit either. So sad!
As a society, we've got to fight this and get affordable housing!
Despite all my rage, I am still just a rat in a cage.
Woooo! I miss the 90's.
@Susan Hughey difference is that was a charity, these are very expensive
Only if you choose to be. There must be some way to fight back. Think, thinking isn't illegal yet.
@Susan Hughey not before my time. Mos def in my wheelhouse.☺️
@Daniel Wong ding, ding, ding. FTW.
I used to live there and eventually had to leave b/c of the difficulty in finding affordable/available housing, I lived in some expensive tiny rooms with crazy ppl and not very good living conditions sometimes... so I totally appreciate what this guy is doing.
Privacy in tiny quarters.
There is always a Detroit out there waiting to be conquered
Just look at Hong kong apartments, Patrick Kennedy will look like an amateur. Why is he making the layout so uncomfortable?
Signature Thapa Yeah, they didn't think out the layouts very well
@@kotare86 I agree , it looks depressing
This seems to be a man that created a space he wouldn't be caught dead living in, kind of an "these idiots will pay for this and they'll like it" sort of vibe (which is not to say that people who want this style of living are idiots, just that the developer seems to have that attitude).
"We also deliberately made all the furniture slightly uncomfortable." 😵
it's depressing because they remind me of institutionalized dorms the only people that could afford these are hipster students.. the average person won't live in these stupid places
It's only 500$ per person.
@@Gamerad360 Really? Show us the rental page for these apartments available at this price.
Thats exaclty who will live in these in Frisco because normal can't affords anything else there. Rich Fucks destroyed that option.
@@Sybaris_Rex That's what the man in the video said....
@@Gamerad360 Yet, the provided link to his "smart spaces" is a 404. I'm not going to waste my time looking too far into it but I did a few searches and didn't find some magical $500/person small apartments under this guy's name. Either the waiting list is both private and likely as long as our lifetime or the prices skyrocketed such that the whole purpose was blown out. ...or, perhaps, the project just fell apart.
I feel like he is doing this because it's a good marketing opportunity. He does not seem that passionate about micro housing. Maybe that's not true but it kind of how he came across.
“Can be heated with a hair dryer”
A hair dryer uses 1,500w. The exact same as a space heater. He’s saying the space is so small all you need is a one room heater but making it sound like some crazy efficiency by mentioning a hair dryer
No. He means people dry their hair anyway. Its called passive heating.
He is pitching. No big deal. There are worse ones to be seen.
There’s a fine line between a correctional facility and this building
Very fine line, can barely see it
Clearly you have never been in a correctional facility...
@@mad555max no but, I meant a facility in Canada.
Prison cells starting as low as $1,500. a month. Includes: Day-Room & Rec. Yard.
My God, what have we become? That is so depressing. I'm not sure the six figure income is worth it. You can get a better quality of life in a much more rural area. There is something so dystopian about this.
Good video, it's sad to see my old house from outside the window and see what that neighborhood is turning into though, a bunch of sterile, overpriced apartments for techies. Didn't catch him mentioning a price but I'm sure it's over 1400 for one of those rooms. LOL at "affordable" housing in SF.
try $3-4,000.00
+Andrew B Actual Price is $12,000/year for the two bedroom apartments. $1000/month or $500/month per person. Actually not bad at all.
+Cory Lannon wow. not bad at all. A friend of mine lives in a one bedroom apt. in downtown SF. $3,000.00 a month.
+Bob Vance just checked with my friend he says $4,000 a mo. one bedroom apartment.
+Knight Rider Iol
In Ireland these are called bedsits. I've lived in them they are depressing af. Though ours were just divided Victorian era houses.
I will call it bedshit, cos u can only sleep & shit in them..
I got depressed just by looking at this video..
sadly he has created an extremely sterile environment. not one sofa or comfortable chair. Dormitories are more warm and inviting than this place. Where do you go to put you feet up after a hard day of work or school. You are forced to go to your bed. So say what you will. He has built a very sterile dorm. sad really
I agree with you 1000% if possible. I kept thinking, he couldn't even put some sofas in the common area. You know he probably has more then one sofa at his home. This project to me looks like a total fail.
They probably want high turnover so they can keep charging people market rate rents. None of those annoying long term renters ever getting comfortable
You can put your feet in the kitchen sink and get a foot bath at the same time
This is one of the most interesting videos in the channel, not just because it's about SF, but because it gives and an investors's in-depth perspective. All the spaces look very well done. Love the rooftop BBQ zone and the bike parking. I would enjoy living in this building for a couple of years with some cool people, studying or working on a startup.
Fun fact ..
He says "this is San Francisco " 600 times in this video.
With the schools leasing the building it means that graduates will struggle to continue to live in the City. The whole point of the micro approach is to allow young professionals to stay urban.
I want to know if this man, politicians et al, the people with these ideas to pack people into cells for their living spaces, are people like this man and politicians pushing this kind of living, are THEY willing to live in these things? I can bet this man in the video has a very nice, very roomy living place in a really good part of SF.
I immediately ordered some of those awesome door hooks and soft close cabinet dampers after watching this. :)
I live in Tokyo now and have lived in LA in the past. I believe smaller apartments are the future for many in large cities like SF and LA. People freak out at the size but once you've lived this way its not really a big deal.
After living in HK, these seem quite luxurious.
Yeah, somehow though they need to check how many people are actually living in a small space like that. It's not an intrusion but more of, to be used the way it's designed.
Ive lived in tiny places I like it*
Urban sustainable prisons; Rat Park for humans.
averat84 prisoners have more space
So Basically he took a fairly standard college dorm style layout, then added bells and whistles with the personality of driftwood...
People didn't graduate from college to move into a dorm room.
This is what happens when you have a city gov that has been bought and paid for.
It's college dorm living in your 30's no thank you.
jbgrooves This is justification for Gentrification!
jbgrooves, it's what happens when two million people want to live in a city that can comfortably hold 500,000.
@@incognitotorpedo42 In Tokyo in the same size 4 million people fit comfortable. this is what happens when for 20 years Nimbys block all of the development
And also in Tokyo, you can rent a 800 sq ft two bedroom apartment for 1800 a month in the center or buy a 300k single family home around 1800sq ft in the suburbs. It is a simple supply and demand, If you build enough housing, prices won't be crazy.
17:10 ish) For me personally, the answer is yes. The windows would absolutely make me more inclined to take the stairs
"Garden variety hipsters" lol
+Skyler Johnston Insulting at best.
+Ronny Julian Absolutely! Everyone knows SF is almost entirely free-range hipsters these days. Get with the times, daddy-o!
I can dig it because I'm HEP!
+Skyler Johnston ...with their fancy "ubs" ports.
and their 200 megabyte internet...
I could tell him an RV wet bath does not work well in apartments. Many of the rooms look like a dorm room and a hospital room but at least he is trying with sample spaces. Folks also like to open their windows to get fresh air. He should take some tiny home designs and incorporate that into an apartment. I would recommend comfortable furniture in the open spaces and wifi is important all over because people like to get away and work in an open space not just a library space. How about spaces for scooters like Vespa's.
He did, almost every wall is storage.
Sorry to pop your balloon, the Chinese already do this in large scale
I LOVE the bike room!!! That is the one thing my place doesn't have. we do have an underground garage for cars, motorcycles, and bikes. The single units are good for older geezers, like me. We are a little bit more into privacy. We just need a few feet, but it should be a private few feet. In college we had 4 people in a 2 bedroom apartment. That was fine . . . then.
I have long advocated for micro apartments at home in the USA. I am currently a digital nomad in SE Asia and have loved my apartments. I am in my third one as I travel from area to area (Bangkok-Kathmandu-Chiang Mai, so far). My apartments are in the 30-40 square meter size. They have 1 room + a bathroom. Easy to clean and cheap to heat/air condition. All I really need is a bed, kitchenette, office area, and a bathroom.
For single people, this is fantastic. I have privacy for sleeping, quiet time, and working. When I am not doing those, I don't want to sit alone. So, I am semi-forced to go out to either the common areas of my complex (laundry room, fitness center, pool, lounge areas, outside benches), walk around my area (coffee houses, restaurants, convenience stores, specialty stores) or bike/taxi further for major events (church, board game nights, bicycling club, sight seeing, visiting friends, co-working places, major stores).
I think I have more friends living this way than when I had one bedroom apartments in the USA. I plan to return to the USA in about 3 years and I hope micro apartments explode by then, especially in middle class areas for about $300/month. Come on America, we can do it! And, if that isn't done, I may just buy an RV to simulate a mobile micro apartment.
These apartments remind me of Japan. As a developer his design is clearly encouraging/forcing individuals into a way of living, thinking, and interacting. At a certain point and time in my life, I would've wanted to live in an apartment like that. But there seems to be no solitude, no place to be completely and utterly alone with your thoughts, in contrast with feeling abandoned and alone in a crowded space. Personally, I can't live in large cities anymore. For visits, maybe a week's stay, it would be exciting, but the constant droning of millions outside the glass, wears on me quickly.
Should check out the video on the mouse utopia experiments. Cities ain't healthy...
whats the other solution then? Everyone living in subrubs isnt feasible
That is calling outgrowing your oen shell
Track mud in the bathroom?! Take your shoes off in the house. Wear shower sandals in the bathroom. Problem solved. That Euro-bath focuses on the need for utility in a small space. Perfect. Excellent concepts for livable spaces in all the overpopulated cities in the world. With outdoor spaces such as a small park and garden area surrounding this building, it would serve the needs of the mind as well as the body.
How do you clean those bread boards? Two whole drawers for bread boards? You can use the table...
Right? One bread board will suffice in a place that tiny for people who will more than likely be eating most of their meals from takeout containers
I thought they were just for extra counter space
No that's the guest bed.
@@hijinxart 😂😂 So funny!
You say that, but you don't appreciate how useful 2 supported bread boards are for home cooks.
Listening to this gentleman (to be kind) talk you, hear a clear disconnect between his intellect, the build process, and humanity. Quite vexing.
18:44
Big building, 212 units
Half sized building. 160 units.
That’s 160*2/220 = 45% more units.
I lived in a 500 square foot three bedroom apartment for three years. One of the happiest time in my life. Don’t get attached to material things.
I should buy one of these and use it as my closet.
So if you live in it, you're just like Harry Potter?
the closet in my first apartment was bigger than one of these
The acid test is: would HE live in one? I'm betting "No".
Yes, I would like to know what his own house looks like.
@@maria_casuscelli Per the video link in the above description section, he got his idea for building these units after living in an Airstream with his wife and daughter. That 2011 video has a segment of him giving a tour of his 78 square foot Airstream.
+PageMonster . He wife even thought he was too Skinner-behaviorist, a nice way of saying covertly manipulative.
Well he probably wouldn't and there is nothing wrong with that. He is giving people what they WANT. He is just adapting to the market. I'm sure if he was in a position financially to need one he would.....
I was just to say that there is a particular smugness about him pointing to some features himself fully knowing that it is not "his world".
he made the public space "uncomfortable" what a great space to "escape to"
One is not supposed to park by the lounge at all times.
Wow. This is the reason I love this channel. As someone living outside of the city because of prices this is amazing. I already live a minimilastic life by choice and the design and location of this apartment complex is perfect. Are they building more? Can I get on a waiting list?
Yes! Pack em in like sardines so the developers can make more money! We need to efficiently store our minimum wage drone workers. To hell with privacy or quality of life...that's an upgrade. All lazy workers should be forced to work at stand up desks, and comfortable seats are only for the corporate masters.
YOU ARE BRILLIANT!!
If I didn't have my car (and if I didn't already live 5mins from the city), I would absolutely move here. This is dope.
That’s ok I’ll stay in my van, I could only imagine the rent. It’s turning into a human packing facility no thank you.
Fascinating stuff! I would love to live in one of those units for a few months and see how it feels!
This is the saddest thing I've seen in awhile. It's like Stepford 2016. It's as if they sucked all the life and vitality out of San Francisco, gave it a steel veneer and some technology on the side and shoved it into a vat. Sterile comes to mind, home does not. There is nothing engaging about the space even in the areas that are designated for it. It seems as if the entire building was designed for discomfort - Harsh angles, a sullen gray that permeates everything, no garage, forced everything. All the beauty and charm of San Francisco is totally absent from this property.
With no parking, that guy who is coming to fix a dishwasher will really love parking two blocks away.
That's on a good day lol, sf is a complete nightmare for parking.
They look like Hospital rooms, I could never live there, good vid Kirsten.
@Susan Hughey motel esque
Thought this reminded me of something........love Donna L. R.N.!!!!!
I feel that all their analysis and views of living together are spot on!
I loved the bicycle storage area, the clean air, & the package receiving station.
(As a security guard my boss got fired when a package disappeared)
I love the idea of persuading people: to use the stairs, sit & talk outside the elevator without gadgets, & the hard -uncomfortable chairs to keep people moving, plus the library type of room.
hmm.. Why didn't they build the elevator outside the building like construction elevators?
I guess the building had already been built & the host on the video just remodeled the inside.
This is a big help for people that want to live this way.
I don't like elevators because it used to take me 1/2 an hour just to drive out of the complex.
Now I live in a small city with single family houses. I can get outside in less than 60 seconds.
Your building, approach and use of future-forward technology are comfortably modern and thoughtful. If there is one thing I would revisit for version 2.0, or some version, would be the "Area Sign" i.e., the light-tan or off-white signs with 2-3 lines of copy, E.g., "Reading Room 0111" see at 11:57 and elsewhere. I believe these are a missed opportunity for a creative and understated approach. They are also featured on every floor. I imagine themed "Area Signs" very subtle with unique color back-light and creative copy or themed copy, something more thoughtful and fun. I imagine new tenants being compelled to visit the other floors to view their theme. I imagine tenants meeting and saying "We live up on Bonsai"(the 9th floor) "Stop by. Can't miss it. But if you do....We are on the green floor with the Bonsai tree"...
this is a great "transitional" dorm - like apartment building for young adults/new college graduates. may have some life-long residents as well, but for the most part - it will likely be a good landing/launching pad for that transitional decade between college and "adulthood." here in chicago, we all lived in wrigleyville and put 3-4 people in each apartment after college for that transitional 4-5 years. its a great way to keep costs down those early years.
Good point. You nailed
I have to say, I think this is really cool. Love how dense this place is.
"I always thought that, if you were in your living room... It was depressing to look at a toaster oven."
Me, laying in bed, looks up. There is my toaster over, about 7ish feet away. maybe 8.
Idk. It's kind of nice to be able to keep an eye on the toaster while im in bed.
I'm impressed. Very well designed. Lots of space and natural light. That second apartment has thought of everything! Really nice! That stairwell and ceiling social area are amazing! Love his comment, "we didn't want it to look like we ran out of money when we came to the basement/garage".
This guy seems to really like the standing desks =)
"garden variety hipsters" (8:55) - a contradiction in terms.
"but this (music) conservatory took it" - justice!
Thoroughly enjoyed watching this!
One of the best videos I've seen on this channel so far. A professional tour and great solutions.Still I would change some things for optimal pricing and of course personal likings or needs, but hell - this is a real inspiration for anyone who will buy a small apartment.
Hoy! My 15 year old daughter wants to go to school and live in SF. Many people we talk to there say that she HAS to live outside the city and commute in. This looks like a fantastic affordable option. Thanks for showing this!
Two washers and dryers for 160 apartments? Dude, that's not enough.
That's for every floor of the building. 16:20
And one barbecue.
I really like the aesthetics of that building and the rooms. I also like the communal areas. I wouldn't mind having one of those myself, just not in SF.
I’m late to this. It’s clear he didn’t work with an interior designer. There are no soft or textured surfaces. The “great rooms” are definitely pass-through areas. It makes it seem like it forces residents to hang out in their rooms rather than gather in the living/dining/kitchen. The colors he chose are also hospital/office like. And those bread boards are a total waste of space. There are much better options to create a sturdy cutting surface/workspace in the kitchen, and the stupid bread boards can be stacked in a cabinet or hung on the wall. Some really weird choices.
So much thought and planning... I love it! Thanks for sharing Kirsten. :)
I'm really surprised that there's no gym/workout space.
+Ladee Ember yeah, and they are renting the apartments to musicians, I don't see rehearsal rooms, but there's a "quiet" room. Makes no sense.
Oh, and I found one site advertising the spaces .. where "affordable" ~starts~ at $1495 a month. Crazy.
+sportlol he said music conservatory was 5 min walk away - rehearsal space there - the bldg wasn't built for them - they just renting space after it built -
+Ladee Ember Twitter feminists don't need no workout.
Neither do trolls
Wow thank you for your dedication to your videos, they are amazing to watch
These awful the rooms have zero personality to them and homelessness its like coming home to student hall/hotel 🤢
Also a lot of these designers or people and companies that are making money out of this i bet don’t live in a micro apartment.
hotel was the feeling I had. I think it's helpful to have some stuff in there for starters or offer a selection for new residents to choose from, but having everything being furnished creates a lack of personality (like you said). I'm reminded of videos of people living in their vans with multifunction couches etc. That's nice and all but what if I wanted a different bench by the window? It sounds like a good bit is not customizable.
this guy seems to really enjoy his work, thats always cool to see
"Its intrinsically depressing to look at a toaster oven"
I dont know why that made me lol but it did. These apartments are pretty awesome looking! Very modern! I hope austin, tx does something similar one day.
This is extremely sad, and it is part of San Francisco's housing and living issue. If you expect students to pay for a 150 square-feet apartment, then imagine how much the other companies and community-buildings are going to charge for a 400-560 square feet 1-bedroom apartment. This is why, in most big cities in the U.S today, you find ridiculous rents that vary anywhere from $1,700 to $2,200 for just a studio or a 340-540 square feet apartment, and that is not including the parking-cost (usually around $200.00 per vehicle). This averages to $2,000 to $2,500 just for a STUDIO OR A ONE BEDROOM. Companies continue to build mega-buildings with nice views thinking that is what people want, but people also need size, affordable rents, and flexible communities where they can have pets, or live with their partner, and be able to cook from home. America is becoming more and more violent in its capitalism, we don't want people to be obese or unhealthy but how can you expect them to cook in a 150 square feet building. Pathetic.
To cook, I might try one of those appliances they showed us
@@alquinn8576Yeah, good luck with cooking 3 meals a day in a 340 square feet apartment. I live in a 700 square feet (1 bedroom) apt, with stairs, and I still have a very hard time keeping such a small kitchen organized and clean, and not to mention your whole house smells when you cook and often gets filled of smoke everywhere. Seriously, good luck living there without losing your damn mind!
OMG poor you; you have it worse than the Donner Party. I find smaller spaces easier to keep clean. If you have too much clutter you are probably a hoarder. A good HEPA with an odor prefilter will keep the smells down, assuming you don't have a ventilation system in your kitchen. The Honywell filters are good for price vs efficacy. Also, pro tip: don't cook 3 meals a day; cook in batches occasionally instead.
@@alquinn8576 I like your advice, but I just still think it is inhumane to live in such a small place. It is almost like a prison-cell.
This man is brilliant! I wish his ideas and enthusiasm is spread to other countries. Thank you Kirsten! Very-very interesting video: enjoyed every second of it!
MuraD4x4 the man is an Idiot! Apartments are not supposed to be jail Cells!
This is amazing and I love the Transit screen in the lobby! Awesome idea!
This is too organized: The space cannot be changed. You can't put yourself into it. This apartment needs to be emptier to begin with so that you can put things where you want to put them: Table on this or this side, both work. Office either in this corner or that corner, both work, etc etc. Too restrictive.
I like the way of thinking for this building. In most appartement buildings you live on your own, here there is way more room for interaction and fun. It will make the place a lot more alive!
Today’s students and 20-30 yr olds are living in vans. 250 sqft units are far more humane and luxurious.
Can this guy do a TED talks? This video was brilliant and enthralling!!
+Angela Dorau Amen - great idea.
This is truly depressing
Wow this is an amazing place. Well done to the designers. Brilliant video guys.
this is really disturbing
I agree. This guy skeeves me out.
I love Tiny Homes, but these do not have a homely feel. Like hospital rooms someone said.
This is a old video but those units look horrible.
Agenda 21 acclimatization..
Great video Kirsten. Thanks!
Wow, I'm so glad you talked to this maverick and kept tabs on him. I love so many of his ideas to create an effective user experience for living in SF, which is really tough. I can see students or young professionals living in a place like this because it offer personal space as well as a community space, which works really well together. I wish I saw more examples of using more plants to warm the space. I think veggie gardens would be great on the roof. I think I would be interested to know how recycling and composting could be considered in this urban building. I loved the transportation board and bike hub. I would be keen to see how this grows over time as it get more usage and see what special services can be added to make living there more attractive. Well done. I hope you do another film featuring Patrick Kennedy in another few years.
I would add a system to hang stuff on the walls without to have to nail anything. For hanging art, a rail could be put about and cables could be used to hang pictures at the desired hight. Or walls that you can pin stuff on. Or what if you want to put the TV on another wall. Is there a system of blinds? The windows are perfect to have plants, so a system of hooks to put up potted plants would be nice. Or a system with customized shelves. Also, the bed with the drawers underneath needs to glide seamlessly just as the kitchen drawers.
The funniest and most ironic part is the hipsters moving into these sardine cans will most likely badmouth what they call "flyover states" where master bathrooms are bigger than their depressing apartment cells.
Flyover states have no jobs are much to do tbh Texas, Cali Florida,NY etc is where it’s at
Great video Kirsten!! One of my favorite RUclips channels 😊
I don't care what anyone says this is awesome!!
Wow. Great complex! Alot of thought went into it.... Now we need one designed for older retired folks on limited incomes...preferably in San Diego!
So... A coffin?