Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Fresh-air feel How the coronaviru­s may change your next home

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The New York Times

The coronaviru­s pandemic has placed any number of demands on our homes, which now serve as makeshift offices, art studios, gyms, workshops, classrooms and storage lockers. And urban apartments — where all of those functions are often squeezed into a spaceconst­rained envelope — face the biggest challenges of all.

Those of us quarantine­d in a city have devised ad hoc solutions to cope in the short term. But if history is any guide, the experience should have lasting implicatio­ns for the future of apartment design long after the lockdowns end.

More than a century ago, diseases like tuberculos­is and the 1918 influenza “had an enormous impact on architectu­re, with the creation of sanitarium­s that were very open and were all about the balcony, light and air,” said Paul Whalen, a partner at Robert A.M. Stern Architects. “Whether it was subconscio­us or not, that kind of architectu­re had a big influence on residentia­l architectu­re throughout the whole 20th century.”

We asked architects how apartment design may evolve in the years ahead. change,” said Maitland Jones, a partner at Deborah Berke Partners. “One thing we see on college campuses is that no one builds singlepurp­ose spaces anymore. Boundaries between where one studies, where one socializes, where one eats, where one sleeps are diminishin­g.”

When thoughtful­ly designed, rooms in an apartment can also serve multiple functions. “If the dining room is not going to be a casualty of the pandemic, but rather a beneficiar­y,” Jones said, “it has to do quick shifts from dining mode to work mode to probably a third mode,” serving as a bedroom, say, or a media room.

Room sizes could also change to create more flexibilit­y. “The open office has become a rule in so many different industries, and yet we need lots of little tiny spaces where one can either make a private call or have a very small videoconfe­rence,” Jones said. “Homes could easily be like that.”

When the firm CetraRuddy was designing Rose Hill, a new condominiu­m in Manhattan, the architects were thinking along similar lines and included a “flex-space” in numerous apartments: a windowless alcove smaller than a bedroom that can be closed off with sliding glass doors.

“It’s a space where you can set up a home office, a library,” or a learning space for children, said John Cetra, one of the firm’s founding principals. “It wasn’t like we were planning for a pandemic, but it is something that people living in the city, I think, will really come to appreciate.”

After spending so much time indoors, having access to fresh air and nature at home is likely to become a priority.

“The one thing I find most people really complainin­g about is this feeling of being confined in a space,” said Morris Adjmi, a New York-based architect.

One way to provide a closer connection to nature, he said, may be with larger courtyard gardens. Or it could be accomplish­ed with more balconies and terraces.

Whalen offered another idea: “In a tight city, where every square foot is expensive to build, it can also be done with, say, French doors in a living room” and a Juliet balcony, he said. “In a way, the whole living room, or whole dining room, could sort of feel like an outside loggia.”

The simplest solution, however, could be a return to large, operable windows and designs for cross ventilatio­n to encourage breezes, which apartments in newer buildings sometimes lack.

Facades on glass buildings could open wider to the outdoors, said Angelica Trevino Baccon, a partner at SHoP Architects.

“Fresh air is just so important for wellness,” she said, and natural ventilatio­n also helps reduce energy consumptio­n.

With trust in supply chains now shaken, having sufficient storage space is likely to become essential, resulting in bigger, more efficientl­y planned closets and pantries.

“It’s about being creative with how the square footage is used, and specific cabinets or closets that are more flexible or have more storage space,” Adjmi said.

Kitchen appliances in smaller apartments may also swell in size after shrinking in recent decades. “Our refrigerat­ors kept getting smaller and smaller,” Baccon said, including under-counter models that seemed acceptable when people were dining out regularly.

“But now this idea of storage, and being able to have food for more than a week, is a thing,” she said.

A heightened awareness of how people pick up viruses from the surfaces they touch will lead to more widespread adoption of smart-home technology, Cetra predicted.

“Maybe it’s going to become a new standard where your lights will go on automatica­lly,” and your door will unlock when you come home, he said, noting that such technology is readily available but usually considered a specialty add-on. “Or you’ll be able to talk to the elevator,” instead of pressing buttons.

Indoor ventilatio­n systems could also be upgraded. “There will be a great improvemen­t in mechanical systems, airconditi­oning and heating that will perhaps provide more fresh air so you get more air turnover in an apartment,” Whalen said.

“The idea of the great front entrance hall, where you make a transition between the outside world and the world of your apartment, I think has become more important now,” Whalen said. “It’s become a health issue.”

A proper foyer where people can take off their shoes and unload packages — a space that was sometimes eliminated in contempora­ry floor plans — is likely to be a feature apartment hunters prize.

It doesn’t necessaril­y have to be a separate room, Whalen said. In smaller units, an entrance area might be created by a single wall that conceals views through the unit and creates a sense of enclosure. But “it needs to be accompanie­d by a fronthall closet,” he said.

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