Blue Multifunctional Apartments

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Blue Box Apartment by Bruzkus Greenberg Reorganises a Berlin Attic

The Blue Box apartment by Bruzkus Greenberg is a 75-square-metre attic renovation in Berlin’s Prenzlauer Berg, structured around a deep-blue carpentry core that replaces traditional room divisions. The design removes internal walls to open the plan, allowing light and air to move freely across the space. At the center, the "blue box" acts as a multifunctional element that consolidates storage, seating, and spatial organization into a single volume, creating circulation around it rather than through separate rooms.

The central unit integrates built-in shelving, a banquette, and concealed storage, while defining areas for living, dining, and working without using partitions. Its stained wood finish retains visible grain beneath the blue tone, contrasting with the surrounding lighter surfaces. The layout enables flexible use throughout the day, with elements such as retractable workspaces and rotating furniture adapting the interior to different functions.

Trend Themes

  1. Centralized Multifunctional Cores — A single sculptural volume that consolidates storage, seating, and circulation creates opportunities to compress diverse domestic functions into compact footprints.
  2. Flexible Open-plan Living — Open layouts with movable and retractable elements support temporal reconfiguration of space for living, working, and dining throughout the day.
  3. Concealed Integrated Storage — Built-in, hidden storage systems and dual-purpose furniture that maintain visual minimalism while expanding usable area point to novel space-efficiency solutions.

Industry Implications

  1. Residential Architecture — Architectural practices focusing on micro-apartments and retrofits can leverage multifunctional cores to deliver full amenities within smaller or irregular footprints.
  2. Furniture Manufacturing — Manufacturers of bespoke and modular furnishings are positioned to create engineered, integrated pieces that combine seating, storage, and work surfaces into single units.
  3. Interior Design Technology — Digital tools and parametric design platforms that model retractable and rotating elements enable precise customization of adaptable interiors for varied lifestyles.

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