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My favorite place - Trendbook Pop up my Bathroom | Issue 01/2011 ISH 2011

Today’s bathrooms are no longer chilly, wipe-clean functional cells. Bathrooms are turning into living space. As simple as this meanwhile ubiquitously manifest megatrend might sound, its impact on the sanitary industry and the conceptual possibilities for bathroom design are nothing short of revolutionary. As a result, expectations of the aesthetics and functionality of contemporary bathroom design are growing. Accordingly, there will be more than “just” new products on show at the world’s leading fair for the sanitary industry, the ISH in Frankfurt. For it is not the bathtub that is being reinvented, but the entire bathroom.

Today’s bathrooms are no longer chilly, wipe-clean functional cells. Bathrooms are turning into living space. As simple as this meanwhile ubiquitously manifest megatrend might sound, its impact on the sanitary industry and the conceptual possibilities for bathroom design are nothing short of revolutionary. As a result, expectations of the aesthetics and functionality of contemporary bathroom design are growing. Accordingly, there will be more than “just” new products on show at the world’s leading fair for the sanitary industry, the ISH in Frankfurt. For it is not the bathtub that is being reinvented, but the entire bathroom.

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Urban Living<br />

<strong>My</strong> <strong>favorite</strong> <strong>place</strong><br />

In der Stadt wohnen, mitten drin. Hier leben<br />

unterschiedliche Menschen und Kulturen<br />

dicht nebeneinander, mit unterschiedlichen<br />

Lebensrhythmen, unterschiedlicher Musik,<br />

unterschiedlichen Familienstrukturen. Und<br />

auch die Architektur selbst ist heterogen:<br />

Enge Fluchten und verbaute Perspektiven<br />

wechseln mit offenen Plätzen und weitem<br />

Ausblick, Stein mit Grün, Reihenhäuschen<br />

mit Hochhaus. Ein Platz für Individualisten.<br />

Gerade Singles zieht es wieder stärker in die<br />

dicht besiedelten Innenstädte. Dabei werden<br />

konventionelle Grundrisse à la 2- oder<br />

3-Zimmer-KDB mit Schlauchküche und<br />

08/15-Bad, in dem die üblichen Verdächtigen –<br />

Waschtisch, Badewanne (mit Duschabtrennung)<br />

und WC – rundherum an den gekachelten<br />

Wänden aufgereiht sind, grundsätzlich hinterfragt.<br />

Unsere Lebensgewohnheiten haben sich<br />

verändert: Wir suchen offenere Räume, die<br />

auch bei kleinerem Platzangebot großzügig<br />

wirken, mit flexibleren Unterteilungen. Zimmer<br />

werden umfunktioniert, die Wände zwischen<br />

Küche und Wohnzimmer aufgebrochen, und<br />

immer mehr Schreibtische ziehen in das<br />

entweder verwaiste oder noch nicht benötigte<br />

Kinderzimmer. Gerade da, wo der Platz knapp<br />

ist, wird er besonders begehrenswert, und<br />

wer sich entfalten will, lehnt rein funktionell<br />

gestaltete Wohnhülsen ab. Ein Atelier, in dem<br />

Wohnen, Leben und Arbeiten verschmelzen,<br />

wird zum Inbegriff zeitgemäßer Wohnkultur.<br />

Wer das Besondere sucht, findet hier mit etwas<br />

Glück einen Loft oder eine ausgediente Gewerbefläche<br />

mit Fabrikcharme, mit weiten<br />

Räumen und großen Fenstern. Mit mindestens<br />

einem Zimmer, das genug Platz bietet, um sich<br />

auszutoben. Hier werden Möbel zu Raumelementen,<br />

Wänden, Wohninseln. Irgendwo wird<br />

sich auch für das Bett noch eine Ecke finden<br />

– Ha<strong>up</strong>tsache, es ist genügend Raum zum<br />

Kochen, Essen und Feiern. Und natürlich zum<br />

Baden und Entspannen, mit einer Leseecke<br />

und einem Platz zum Stylen. Hier lässt es sich<br />

bequem Sachen anprobieren, vielleicht sogar<br />

mit der Freundin, dabei hört man laut Musik<br />

und tanzt sich einen Derwisch. Wen stört’s?<br />

20<br />

Urban Living<br />

<strong>My</strong> <strong>favorite</strong> <strong>place</strong><br />

Life in the city, right in the thick of it. Different<br />

people and cultures live side by side, with different<br />

daily rhythms, different music, different<br />

family structures. Even the architecture itself<br />

is a reflection of this diversity: closely spaced<br />

rows of houses and obstructed views alternate<br />

with open squares and expansive vistas, stone<br />

rubs shoulders with greenery, little terraced<br />

houses stand shoulder to shoulder with highrises.<br />

A <strong>place</strong> for individualists.<br />

Densely populated downtown areas are enjoying<br />

a new wave of popularity – especially with<br />

singles. At the same time, conventional layouts<br />

with 2 or 3 rooms plus kitchen, hallway and<br />

bathroom are being called into question: the<br />

kitchen is often long and thin, the bathroom<br />

a run-of-the-mill affair in which the usual<br />

suspects – washbasin, bathtub (with shower<br />

enclosure) and toilet – are lined <strong>up</strong> against the<br />

tiled walls. Our habits have changed: we want<br />

more open rooms that feel spacious even if<br />

they’re not particularly big, and more flexible<br />

zoning. Rooms are being given new functions,<br />

the walls between the kitchen and living room<br />

are opening <strong>up</strong>, and more and more desks are<br />

moving into the abandoned or hitherto unocc<strong>up</strong>ied<br />

room that was originally earmarked<br />

for the children. Space becomes particularly<br />

desirable when it is in short s<strong>up</strong>ply, and residential<br />

capsules with a purely functional design<br />

will be rejected by anybody who wants to give<br />

his personality room to unfold. A studio that<br />

merges life, home and work is becoming the<br />

epitome of contemporary interior culture.<br />

With a little luck, those in search of something<br />

special might find a loft or a disused commercial<br />

building with a factory feel, with huge<br />

rooms and big windows. And with at least<br />

one room that has enough space to let off<br />

steam, where the individual pieces of furniture<br />

double as structuring elements and walls or<br />

can be combined to create island-like arrangements.<br />

And there’s bound to be a corner for<br />

the bed somewhere – the main thing is that<br />

there’s enough space for cooking, eating and<br />

partying. And for bathing and relaxing too, of<br />

course, with a reading corner and a <strong>place</strong> for<br />

primping. And with plenty of space for trying<br />

on clothes, maybe even with a friend, as you<br />

listen to loud music and dance like a dervish.<br />

There’s nobody to complain, so who cares?

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