Vancouver Sun

Push a button, a bed appears before your eyes

Tapping into robotic furniture system ideal for living large in small spaces

- AUDREY HOFFER

You wouldn’t think that having your mother along with you and your husband on a weekend trip across country, let alone in a tiny, 450-square-foot apartment, would be a lot of fun.

But Heidi Grütter, who lives in San Diego, said it couldn’t have worked out better when they stayed together in a Boston Airbnb. “Me, my husband, Jimmy (Kan) and Mom,” she said. “It turned out as perfectly as it could.”

They didn’t sleep in triple bunk beds pushed against the wall, but the couple did sleep in a double bed that literally rolled out of sight in the morning.

“We said, ‘Alexa, ask Ori to close the bed!’ and the bed moved into the wall unit,” Grütter said, or in Ori-speak, into living room mode. Then the living room got bigger.

Ori is the revolution­ary new concept in small space living a robotic furniture system that morphs into a bedroom, office/dressing room or living room at the touch of a keypad or an app voice command. The system enables people to use one room in several ways by moving furniture.

“Why should you waste precious space in a studio apartment with a bed that takes up so much of the room? Ori lets you win back space for your living room when you’re not sleeping,” said Adrian Sanchez.

He and his fiancée stayed in the same apartment as Grütter, at the Watermark Seaport in Boston, in which an Ori system is installed. Ori, the company, rents this apartment through Airbnb as a pilot to gather feedback about the system from users.

“Having everything all packed away is stylish. When there’s a bed in the room, there’s not much else you can do,” said Lee Dilton-Hill, who also rented that apartment when she visited Boston.

“For me, the system was intuitive and not overly complicate­d.”

As Hasier Larrea, the chief executive and brains behind Ori, sees it, “Urbanizati­on is unstoppabl­e. Cities are growing by leaps and bounds, so we better come up with new solutions to make them smarter, because that’s where people work and where they want to live.

“We have to rethink how we fit more people in, and how we organize the spaces they live and work in.”

Today’s younger generation­s want to live downtown, but that comes with a financial challenge. Either they have a lot of money or they live in a prison cell, he said.

“This is where we come in. We want to change the paradigm to living large in a small footprint,” Larrea said. “People think square footage and functional­ity are linearly related, but that’s the old paradigm.”

Larrea, 29, was a Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology student from San Sebastian, in Basque Country, Spain, from 2011 to 2015, studying mechanical engineerin­g and design. While there, he led a student research project with professor Kent Larson in the MIT Media Lab, a creative hub of engineers, architects, magicians, doctors and artists whose synergy inspires them to dream up new ideas about hot topics in today’s society.

Robotic furniture was his team’s idea. “In 2015, my team of four and I decided we’d done enough research, and it was time to spin out our idea and bring it into the market with the help of the MIT Entreprene­urship Center,” Larrea said.

He looked for developers with an imaginativ­e mindset and willingnes­s to take a risk. More than 10 across the country and one in Canada, Vancouver-based Bosa Properties, signed on. “They really got it. They saw the potential and decided to join the pilot program,” Larrea said.

Next year, the company will install 500 to 1,000 units across the U.S. and Canada. “They won’t be prototypes but the real thing,” he said. People will be able to rent or buy apartments with the Ori system. The company isn’t yet selling directly to consumers.

Valor Developmen­t in Washington was one of the first to install Ori in one apartment. It’s in the Vintage, an 85-unit rental building.

When you walk into an Ori studio, you see a fully outfitted kitchen on one wall, table and chairs, couch and an elegant wood credenza with shelves, drawers and TV screen. So there’s a living room and dining area.

But, you ask, where is the bedroom? Press a button on the touch pad adhered to the credenza, and you’ll experience the magic.

Walls start moving. A bed glides out of one side of the credenza. You’re now in bedroom mode. The living room, on the other side of the credenza, has become smaller, although still comfortabl­e for a couch-sleeping guest.

Next morning, you push another button or tell Alexa, Amazon’s voice assistant, to ask Ori to close the bed and move into closet mode. The bed slides partly back into the credenza, and a walk-in closet emerges.

The credenza transforms into several furniture pieces, with different functions offering varied uses of the space. The Ori system has several layers:

Muscle is the black track along the baseboard that’s plugged into a convention­al electric outlet. It powers the furniture’s movement.

Skeleton is like a car chassis. You don’t see it.

Brain is the computer in the touch pad.

Skin is the wood or laminate used to make the credenza.

The credenza looks like an ordinary piece of furniture, yet it provides solutions to the most common complaints of studio renters not being able to divide the space or hide the bed, and lack of storage.

This past June, Larrea visited Vancouver as part of a private 10city tour to showcase his “furniture with superpower­s.”

“Ori’s system is all about making living spaces more efficient and intelligen­t which is something we desperatel­y need in Vancouver,” Martin Rahn, Bosa vice-president of developmen­t and innovation, said in a statement. “We are envisionin­g a future of smart living in our buildings, not just with Ori but with other systems that help people live bigger and better.”

 ?? PHOTOS: LISA CRANSHAW/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? The credenza looks like an ordinary piece of furniture but it divides the space and contains a bed that rolls out on command.
PHOTOS: LISA CRANSHAW/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST The credenza looks like an ordinary piece of furniture but it divides the space and contains a bed that rolls out on command.
 ??  ?? When switching to living room or office mode, the bed goes back in the credenza, which can transform into several pieces with different functions.
When switching to living room or office mode, the bed goes back in the credenza, which can transform into several pieces with different functions.

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