Whatever your project may
be Benjamin Moore has the
paint thatâs right for you.
REGAL® Select
For a scrubbable paint that
actually repels stains.
ADVANCE®
For a furniture-like fi nish on
trim doors and cabinets.
©2016 Benjamin Moore & Co. Limited. ADVANCE Aura Benjamin
Moore Paint like no other REGAL and the triangle âMâ symbol are
registered trademarks and Benjamin Moore Natura is a trademark
of Benjamin Moore & Co. Limited.
Benjamin Moore
Natura
TM
For environmentally friendly paint
that is safer for you and your family.
48 H&H SEPTEMBER 2016
to me then. Even Rhodaâs tiny nest in
The Mary Tyler Moore Show seemed
fine to me. No one described the
I Love Lucy apartment as âsmall.â
By North American standards when
the average family in the 1930s lived
in approximately 1000 square feet
the homes of the â50s and â60s
were spacious!
If you were born in the â70s you got a
little more space but it wasnât until the
â80s â during the years of Dallas and
Dynasty big shoulders and even bigger
hair â that the average single-family
home ballooned to over 2000 square
feet! J.R.âs mansion on Southfork Ranch
was almost 6000 square feet and that
was considered palatial.
Fast-forward to 2016. Can you guess
the size of todayâs average single-family
home? At 2463 square feet it allows
each inhabitant to enjoy approximately
1000 square feet of floor space. But if
youâre looking at the downtown condo
market in any major city the average
three-bedroom âaffordableâ condo for a
single family is back to 1300 square feet
â exactly the kind of space I grew up in.
And yet these spaces feel much more
livable than the old bungalows and
ranch houses of the â60s and â70s.
Weâre smarter now. We donât
waste much space on hallways.
Formal dining rooms are gone and
things like ultrathin wall-mounted
f latscreen TVs tiny Sonos sound
systems window walls and glass
partitions save space and create an
expansive feeling. But beyond that
weâve learned to embrace âsmallâ as a
virtue and to tailor our lives to having
less and enjoying the freedom that
comes with that.
I think weâve learned much of what
we know about clever downsizing by
watching how savvy millennials
live and decorate. They donât bother
with landlines phone sets full-size
printers cameras CDs or sadly books.
Theyâve done away with box springs
multiple sets of dishes and cabinets full
of glasses. The right tableware looks
great for everyday and can be dressed
up for special dinners with some clever
layering and all-purpose low-stem
crystal wineglasses which always work.
A beautifully designed modernist chair
makes an elegant statement in a
fraction of the space of an old-
fashioned overstuffed upholstered one.
Thin lamps thin tables thin rugs and
wardrobes that are about seasonless
layering of thin warm fabrics â so
much easier than storing all sorts of
heavy winter clothes. Seating and beds
are much lower and tubs are smaller
and freestanding or nonexistent.
The best approach to decorating
small spaces seems to be a selective
creative use of decorative materials like
patterned tiles wallpaper mixed
woods natural stone and composites.
Hardware is sleek and special â like
fine jewelry â and light fixtures are
sculptural and elegant. We know from
the example of single-f loor London f lats
that a tiny room can be layered up in a
luxe mixture of glossy dark paint petite
antiques lively prints and exquisite
artifacts for a dressier look.
One by one my friends seem to
be leaving behind their big family
homes and moving into condos and
townhouses â customized to
incorporate carefully edited pieces
into a fresh new mix. Every one of them
loves their new sleek effortless space.
Thereâs something so appealing about
the idea of living in a self-contained
small yet elegant apartment that offers
all the zones of a real house close
at hand.
To this day I still keep a file of
favourite one-room âgreat roomsâ with
a dressy kitchen along one wall and a
comfy sitting room that includes a
round table as a centerpiece. Thinking
back Iâve realized where that idea came
from. I was watching those single girls
in their imaginary apartments in the
â60s and â70s taking in every detail. My
all-time favourite wasnât Rhodaâs kooky
Bohemian lair or Mary Richardsâ
charming attic apartment with the
pocket kitchen and sunken living room;
it was Brenda Morgensternâs tiny
fashion-forward apartment in New
York. I still remember the pale yellow
wall of art hung salon-style with a white
Parsons table and a wicker fanback
chair tucked in the corner. It was all one
room with a kitchen on one wall and a
round draped table in the centre of the
room â and I thought it was perfection.
Iâm guessing ... 400 square feet tops.
What do you think?
VIEW