apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


AT Europe: Paris - Ceiling Bed from Espace Loggia

el1.jpg

The Mobile Bed. For those who really don't have room for a bed, here's one that you can store on the ceiling when it's not in use from Espace Loggia...

 
 
el2.jpg

Here are the beds being demonstrated at the Salon Maison & Objet -- they are easy to manipulate up and down and don't make a sound.


el3.jpg

el5.jpg


On its website, Espace Loggia informs us that it was founded in the late 70s by Brigitte Bardot's sister. Designed by Guillaume Parent, Espace Loggia products are made on the French Atlantic coast using sea pine from the Landes region and white oak. Stores in Paris, Nice, Geneva and Lausanne.


- Kristin Hohenadel blogging from rue Vieille du Temple, Paris, France. She can be reached at kristinh @ apartmenttherapy . com

Tags

AT Europe, beds & mattresses

Related Links

Share

Comments (20)

Nice. I like....though *I* wouldn't sleep in it. Looks a bit claustrophobia inducing...

posted by rachel (between denver/nyc) on 2007-11-14 16:46:41
view rachel (between denver/nyc)'s profile

I suspect this costs more than the space it saves?

posted by Michael on 2007-11-14 16:49:16
view Michael's profile

At $1000 a sqft to buy a place in Manhattan, me thinks not.

posted by Kah on 2007-11-14 17:23:28
view Kah's profile

So much sexier than loft beds or murphy beds.
Or is that the bardot influence?

posted by alexis on 2007-11-14 17:26:20
view alexis's profile

what a wonderful combo yellow and orange continues to be.

posted by olga on 2007-11-14 17:52:54
view olga's profile

This reminds me of something from the children's book, The Twenty-one Balloons. It's about a late-19th century helium balloon traveler, who lived in a tiny hut made of wicker that hung below the balloon. For a bed, he had a mattress filled with helium that would float up to the ceiling when he took the blankets off it.

posted by barbara on 2007-11-14 17:57:06
view barbara's profile

I think this is fantastic...

posted by Jess2nola on 2007-11-14 18:54:52
view Jess2nola's profile

Hmm...looking at the photos made me feel hemmed in and sad. This just looks like sleeping in one's office, and what could be more depressing than that? That's a notch above sleeping in your car.

I know from experience that Paris apartments can be smaller than New York apartments, and strangely laid-out, but this looks like a bummer of a solution to me, unless you are neat as a pin and own practically nothing. Otherwise it could feel like you're literally sleeping in your closet, surrounded by disarray. Surely there are more uplifting (no pun intended) solutions for small spaces.

posted by Leela on 2007-11-14 19:06:38
view Leela's profile

This would work, say, by converting a large walk-in closet into your office/bedroom, and then using the original bedroom for a closet and/or living/dining area. All you'd need is one of those tiny bathrooms that turn into a shower and some sort of kitchen and you'd be, as the real estate agents say, "cozy."

posted by polina on 2007-11-14 19:46:49
view polina's profile

This is ingenious! And the advantage over a murphy bed is that it comes down on top of the desk or table or sofa or whatever you have underneath it; you don't have to move other furniture out of the way. It looks like it requires a step ladder to climb into, though.

I think it only looks like you're sleeping in an office because it's displayed in a showroom. For folks who think of a bed as a luxurious and beckoning nest of quilts and pillows where they can read and hang out with the cats, it's not going to work. But if you mostly use your space for entertaining and/or working and just think of a bed as a place to snatch several hours of sleep each night, it's quite a solution!

posted by Jane on 2007-11-14 20:38:04
view Jane's profile

Barbara: I remember that book! Our teacher read it to us, one chapter each day, after lunch when I was in second or third grade!

posted by Jane on 2007-11-14 20:38:59
view Jane's profile

It also reminds of sleeping on a train or boat. If you travel a lot anyway, and use your place as a pied a terre, this'd be fun. Okay, I'll shut up now!

:)

posted by Jane on 2007-11-14 20:41:26
view Jane's profile

Barbara,
I love Twenty-One Balloons! I thought I was the only one. The way that guy set up his little home in the balloon's gondola is inspiration to me for small, cool living.

posted by brooklino on 2007-11-14 21:56:26
view brooklino's profile

yeah, I agree... you would have to be as neat as a pin.... and the bed is really high.

I think it could be a great guest bed, though.... It would be more practical if it was only taken down once in a blue moon...

posted by decorating, cooking and science on 2007-11-15 00:23:34
view decorating, cooking and science's profile

I have a Murphy bed, and taking it down every night really is not that big of a deal, and I love that it kind of "makes" me make my bed every night so my apartment looks like just a big living room.

But I have lived with loft beds, and I think this invention is kind of an ingenuous combination, and depending on the specific configuration of the apartment, this could be spot-on perfect.

posted by Curtis on 2007-11-15 00:38:45
view Curtis's profile

I see the ads for these beds almost everyday in the metro, and just don't understand the appeal. For everyday use, it doesn't look comfy (why not use a daybed?). For guests, it seems like a bad idea to reduce your ceiling height for just occasional use. I guess it could work in a place with really high ceilings.

posted by clemoni on 2007-11-15 04:59:51
view clemoni's profile

Based on personal experience, this type of bed is great solution for small spaces. It's comfortable, quiet, impressively sturdy, and easy to move up and out of the way.

posted by mdunlop on 2007-11-15 11:06:03
view mdunlop's profile

So, where can u get one of these?

posted by djohnson on 2007-11-15 11:48:25
view djohnson's profile

I get the concept and all, but it just doesn't look comfortable. I guess I am spoiled because my bed has a super-thick mattress, so comparing that to this looks like I'm sleeping on cardboard. Also, I know people have said that NYC apartments are small, but this just looks like a bed on a train to me.

posted by ll on 2007-11-15 12:52:16
view ll's profile

djohnson,

You can write directly to Espace Loggia here

http://www.espace-loggia.com/en/contact.html

for more information.

posted by Kristin Hohenadel on 2007-11-15 15:25:58
view Kristin Hohenadel's profile