Vancouver Sun

Tiny homes still have room for what matters

- MEGAN BUERGER

For most people, the choice to live in a small space is all about location, the chance to live on a busy city block in the centre of the action. But for others, it’s about the freedom of living light.

Nobody understand­s the ethos of small-space living better than proponents of the tiny-house movement, who opt to live in homes that average around 200 square feet. Their choices, much like those who live in a studio apartment, are often framed as sacrifices. But Vina Lustado, an interior designer in Ojai, Calif., who lives in a 140-square-foot home that she designed two years ago, says that thinking is all wrong.

“There’s a whole emotional side to stuff,” she says. “But living with less is not about what you lose. It’s about what you gain.”

Lustado adapted her philosophy about small-space living from Marie Kondo, a Japanese organizati­on expert who has written four books about doing more with less. But what makes Kondo’s approach different from the scores of other declutteri­ng coaches is its positive framing.

“Rather than saying, ‘Throw this out, throw that out,’ she teaches you to find joy in what you own,” Lustado says. “If it doesn’t bring you joy, maybe you don’t need it.”

The obvious perk is her low cost of living. Lustado’s home cost $40,000 to build, including solar panels and interior furnishing­s, and the acre of land it sits on is an additional $500 a month (the average home in Ojai costs about $550,000). But she doesn’t find it stifling. She entertains frequently and said that, for a designer, decorating the space was the most fun she’s ever had. “This movement, ultimately, is all about smart design: light, materials, strategic layouts,” she says. “It’s the exact same principles, and it’s way more challengin­g to do it sustainabl­y, affordably and beautifull­y.”

Of course, there are hurdles. Paring down her wardrobe took months and she’s become a very resourcefu­l cook. And, more than a year into living in her home, she still returns a lot of things she buys. It’s worth it, she says, because of the peace of mind she has found.

After speaking with Lustado, I looked around my tiny apartment and wondered whether there were items I was hanging on to for no reason: candles I’ll never light, old laptops that don’t turn on, leaky rain boots that certainly don’t bring me joy and take up precious closet space. Kondo’s voice crept into my mind, urging me to weigh quality over quantity.

Inspired, I did a gentle sweep and set aside two full bags for donation and lugged them to a nearby drop-off centre. It’s nothing compared with Lustado’s Ojai minimalism, but after a few days, I realized I didn’t miss any of the items I parted with. In fact, I was glad to have cut the cord. “Maybe she’s on to something,” I thought. This Lustado already knows.

“I’m building a tiny office as we speak,” she says. It’s 115 square feet, solar and on wheels, and will be the new headquarte­rs of her firm, Sol Haus Design. “I’m not looking back.”

If downsizing is on your agenda, here are a few of our favourite multi-functional furniture pieces from our past articles on small-space living that offer a lot of bang for their buck. A room divider that doubles as a bookcase? That brings us joy.

Garden seats

“They’re the opposite of frivolous,” says Jonathan Yaraghi, the creative director of Safavieh, a furniture store headquarte­red in New York. The retailer’s most popular garden stool is shaped like a gold, glazed elephant ($195 US, safaviehho­me.com). “They can be used almost anywhere as a table or extra seat, and they’re a high-impact design piece. They’re a little piece that packs a lot of style.”

Sectionals

The biggest misconcept­ion about sectionals? That they’re big. “Whatever your hesitation­s are, get over them,” Liz Levin, a designer based in Bethesda, Md., says. “Especially if you’re in a small space, it’s probably exactly the solution you’re looking for.” Levin recommends an 2.5-metre sofa with a chaise about a metre and a half long, which should allow you room for a practical coffee table. CB2’s Lotus sectional ($499-$799 US per piece, cb2.com) is sleek but still comfortabl­e.

Room dividers

Rental contracts don’t often permit custom woodwork to add privacy to a space, so invest in a room screen or tall shelving unit instead. Most pieces measure around two metres tall, allowing some space between the top of the unit and the ceiling, which lets light through.

Your safest bet is a modular-style bookcase that looks like open square boxes stacked on top of one another, such as Ikea’s Kallax shelving unit ($139 US, ikea.com), which comes in white, black and birch finishes and has 16 cubes.

Accent chairs

“If a room were an outfit, the accent chairs would be the jewelry,” Alexandria, Va., designer Betsy Stires says. “It’s the spark. It pops from the rest of the palette, but also ties it all together.”

Look for chairs that fall between 62 to 82 centimetre­s wide and have a seat depth of 50 to 56 centimetre­s. Room and Board’s Celeste swivel chair ($749 US, roomandboa­rd.com) measures 80 centimetre­s wide and is low to the ground, so it can visually open or close a seating area depending on which direction it faces.

Mirrors

“Decorating small spaces is 75 per cent visual manipulati­on,” designer Coleman Riddell says, “and mirrors are hands down the best way to trick the eye. They can make it seem like you’ve got way more square feet, height and light than you paid for.”

A pro tip: Go big. “The smaller the space, the bigger the mirror,” Rockville, Md., designer Kristin Peake says. “With mirrors, you can never, ever, go too big.” Even at two metres tall and a metre wide, Pottery Barn’s Berke oversized leaning floor mirror ($799 US, potterybar­n. com) would be an elegant addition to any room.

 ??  ?? Sectionals such as CB2’s Lotus may seem big, but they’re a very efficient way to use space.
Sectionals such as CB2’s Lotus may seem big, but they’re a very efficient way to use space.

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