Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

High-end bunk bedrooms climb the social ladder

- EVE M. KAHN

The bunk bed, born two centuries ago as an austerity measure, is living in some splendor. For country houses, luxury hotels and yachts, architects and designers are decking out the basic components of pillars, railings and ladders with timbers, zingy colors, playful cutouts and gingerbrea­d.

In the realm of custom bunk rooms, “there’s always an element of whimsy,” said Kara Miller, an interior designer based in Jupiter, Fla., who has trimmed bunk beds in diagonal filigree based on Chinese Chippendal­e precedents. When clients start to plan new houses, “right out of the gate,” she said, the bedrooms’ windows, doors and closets are being configured to leave cubic footage available for bunk beds.

“You can let your imaginatio­n run wild with them,” she added.

The trend has been partly attributed to covid-19. As retreat from society may be required, some homeowners want to be prepared to hole up someplace cheerful and comforting, which can accommodat­e groups of people not necessaril­y willing to share mattresses. Liz Caan, an interior designer in Newton, Mass., said her bunk room clients had said, in effect, “We want to be able to sleep a gazillion people.”

Owners report that bunk rooms free up floor area while generating a sense of camaraderi­e, and that openings between chambers allow for communicat­ion and clambering.

“My grandkids just love going in and out of those portholes,” said Margaret Condit, whose Maryland shorefront house, designed by Purple Cherry Architects, has caramel-colored trim on its white bunk beds’ portholes.

“Everybody says they want to sleep in that room,” she said.

Nostalgia also helps motivate new bunk commission­s. David Williams, a marketing and investment executive based in Annapolis, Md., grew up and attended college while sleeping in bunk beds. Purple Cherry Architects designed twin bunk rooms for one of his houses, each with a U of six stacked beds trimmed in shiplap siding and painted offwhite. He described the sets as “certainly a fun thing, and a great creator of space.” For his grandchild­ren and subsequent generation­s, he added, “I hope those bunks become a part of their history, as it has for me.”

The furniture form, however, is not as historical as it may seem. Natalie Larson, a bedding history expert in Williamsbu­rg, Va., said there were records of bunk beds installed in the early 19th century in prison wards, railroad cars and military barracks. Bunk rooms have also been used in submarines, military ships, schools, summer camps, concentrat­ion camps and bomb shelters. In combing archaeolog­ical evidence and wills and inventorie­s, among other sources, Larson said she had found virtually no evidence that bunk beds served residentia­l or hospitalit­y purposes before the 20th century. Homeowners long preferred lower-slung and more portable beds, which could be dismantled or moved aside in multipurpo­se rooms and sold off in hard times. And owners of hotels or taverns would simply have guests share mattresses.

By the early 1900s, moviemaker­s were portraying bunk beds unflatteri­ngly. In the “Three Stooges,” Moe, Larry and Curly tried to catch some sleep before crushing each other as rickety bed tiers pancaked. In the Charlie Chaplin short film “Shoulder Arms,” floodwater­s poured into bunk rooms on a World War I battlefiel­d.

Not until the ’50s did the bunk bed develop any aura of high style. In the “Brady Bunch,” brothers Bobby and Peter shared a bunk bed painted sapphire blue, with matching quilted bedcovers. In the 1970s and ’80s TV series “Diff’rent Strokes,” brothers Arnold and Willis Jackson, living in a Park Avenue apartment, tucked a desk under their L-shaped bunk bed with brown tubular supports vaguely modeled after tree trunks.

Jason Reid, the author of “Get Out of My Room! A History of Teen Bedrooms in America,” said he watched “Diff’rent Strokes” when it was new: “I remember as a child coveting the bunk beds they had in their room.” Reid’s book quotes Greg Brady, the oldest of the three sons, who considered sharing a room with his brothers’ bunks “like a jail sentence.”

As the bunk room’s popularity grows, a few complicati­ng factors have emerged. Changing the bedding calls for strength and agility while maneuverin­g in tight corners and atop ladders.

“It’s exhausting trying to figure out how to make those beds,” Williams said.

Children need to be monitored to prevent injury because of jumps or falls from bunks. Aging knees and hips, among other body parts, can be poorly suited to spending the night on upper levels.

A reporter recently decided to see how well her limbs and sense of balance, after nearly six decades of wear and tear, would tolerate the bunk-room experience. At the Arlo SoHo hotel in Manhattan, she climbed along walnut-colored bed frames connected by black ladders and pipe columns. Her joints made no protest, and from a top bunk, she enjoyed a sense of superiorit­y, with a bird’s-eye view of former industrial buildings.

Cordell Nelson, the hotel’s general manager, reminisced while he gave her a building tour. He said, “I always wanted a bunk bed when I was a kid.”

 ?? (Durston Saylor via The New York Times) ?? These upscale bunk beds were designed by Purple Cherry Architects in Centrevill­e, Md.
(Durston Saylor via The New York Times) These upscale bunk beds were designed by Purple Cherry Architects in Centrevill­e, Md.
 ?? (Carmel Brantley via The New York Times) ?? Kara Miller designed this dressed up bunk bed. These communal spaces may have humble roots, but now they’re features with style, whimsy and nostalgia.
(Carmel Brantley via The New York Times) Kara Miller designed this dressed up bunk bed. These communal spaces may have humble roots, but now they’re features with style, whimsy and nostalgia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States