I met an incredible woman on a random outing to London while I was living life in slow motion, alone in a quiet English seaside town. I fell in love in a way that surprised me, both in its speed and its certainty. I knew it was her. The relationship unfolded across train rides, weekends, and the growing realization that what I thought was a temporary chapter in my life was quietly becoming its center.
Arid reworks and extends a two-story corner building from 1951 in the Patissia district of Athens into a hybrid residential, co-living, and co-working building. The project, dubbed Veil, renovates the original fabric and adds three new floors above it, resulting in an 850-square-meter building that engages directly with its neighborhood's spatial logic. The intervention is shaped by Karamanlaki Street's characteristic morphology, where setbacks generate 'prassies,' semi-open front gardens.
Designers Ye Jin Lee, Jung A Park, and Yujin Lee definitely think so, because they created FURNY to solve exactly this problem. FURNY isn't your typical furniture design project. It's a mobile furniture system specifically built for co-living spaces, and its entire purpose is to help people start conversations without that painful awkwardness we've all experienced. The concept is simple but clever: what if furniture could be the friendly person who breaks the ice first?