We all want to listen to music and watch movies, but we don’t want the technology to get in our way. Thus for LifeEdited 2, we deployed a very capable but very simple system. Our needs: Play music from Spotify.
Thanks to Kohler, LifeEdited 2’s bathroom is beautiful and eco-friendly. Our favorite feature is the brushed nickel Stillness Valve in the shower, which separates water pressure from water temperature, allowing users to save water every time they have a shower.
The light bulb market in America is ever-changing and complicated due to shifting regulations. Even though the U.S. Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 sought to enforce the phase-out of incandescent lightbulbs, setting standards which LED and CFL lightbulbs already.
In building LifeEdited 2, we aimed to create a high quality of life within a small space. The cordless Hunter Douglas Honeycomb Shades helped us do this. With big windows on both sides of the apartment, it is important to have blinds that are.
****THIS APARTMENT IS FOR SALE. PLEASE VISIT THE CORCORAN SITE FOR MORE INFO.**** LifeEdited 2 (LE2) is a prototype for apartments in future LifeEdited buildings. It allows dwellers to live a big, happy, smart, green, and simplified life in a.
Thanks to photographer Christopher Testani we are pleased to share full photo coverage of Graham’s LifeEdited 2 apartment and many of its features. Enjoy! click on thumbnails to see slideshow For bloggers and journalists, feel free to download a zip of the.
This author is not a science fiction enthusiast, so forgive my ignorance of Ernie Cline and his 2011 book “Ready Player One,” which apparently is a big deal in that world. The cover of the book shows a skyline of the not-so-far.
Image above by Rachel Kao. While Europeans are no strangers to communal, urban living, evidenced by things like Baugruppen, the phenomenon is still pretty rare in North America. Cohousing, the most established form or communal living this side of the pond, tends.
One of the biggest demerits of suburban living is how they can have an isolating effect on people who live in them. When most suburbanites leave home, they enter a car that’s usually in an enclosed garage where you often.
Pulling data from the US Census, Finder.com found there are 9.4% more bedrooms in the U.S. than people: 357M bedrooms but only 323.4M people–a 33.6 million bedroom surplus. This figure, they note, is probably very conservative because it assumes one.