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Your Balcony Can Be the Smallest Bedroom You Ever Design

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작성자 Jacelyn Hersom
댓글 0건 조회 3회 작성일 26-06-14 15:53

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I live in a 42 square meter apartment. The balcony is 3.2 meters by 1.5 meters. For three years it held a plastic table, two chairs that rusted in the rain, and a dead fern. Then my mother announced she was visiting for two weeks. I had no guest room. No floor space for an air mattress. The answer was hiding behind that dead fern. I dragged the table inside, measured the concrete floor twice, and started designing a real sleeping space. A functional balcony design does not require square meters. It requires a willingness to ignore the haters who think you cannot sleep outdoors in a city. You can. You just need the right bones.


The first problem is the floor. Concrete is cold and hard. You need a base layer that insulates and drains. I used interlocking wooden deck tiles from a hardware store. They sit directly on the concrete with a 2 centimeter gap underneath for airflow and . They cost me 45 euros. Do not glue them down. Do not use outdoor carpet that holds moisture. Wood slats lifted half a finger off the ground let rain pass through and dry fast. On top of that, I put a thin outdoor rug from IKEA. It is machine washable. The whole floor setup takes thirty minutes to install and zero tools. This base layer changes everything. Suddenly the space feels like a room instead of a wet platform for a broom.


Now the bed. The most critical element of this balcony design was finding something that sleeps a full grown adult but cannot be left exposed to rain. A permanent mattress would mold in a week. A regular camp cot is too low and feels like a taco shell. I searched for months and finally spotted a piece of furniture that solved every problem at once. It is a sofa bed with a click-clack mechanism. During the day it sits against the railing as a two seat sofa. The backrest clicks down with a lever. You pull the seat forward. It becomes a flat sleeping surface with the same mechanism used in compact Japanese guest rooms. The whole transformation takes four seconds. No pillows to stack. No legs to unfold.


The sofa bed I chose has a slatted frame built into the base. This is crucial for airflow. A solid platform would trap moisture against the mattress pad. The slats are spaced 4 centimeters apart. They let my foam mattress breathe even during humid August nights. I ordered a custom foam mattress cut to 120 x 190 centimeters. It is 16 centimeters thick with a high density core and a removable bamboo cover. I bring the mattress inside every morning. It rolls up like a giant yoga mat and slides under my actual bed inside the apartment. The slatted frame stays on the balcony. It is powder coated steel. Rain does not hurt it. Snow does not hurt it. The frame weighs 11 kilos. I can carry it inside for deep cleaning once a month.


Seating during the day matters just as much as sleeping at night. When I am not hosting my mother, the sofa bed functions as a reading nook. I added two thick cushions with velvet upholstery in a deep forest green. Velvet sounds insane for outdoor use. I know. But I treated both cushions with a waterproof spray from a camping store. They repel light rain. They dry in an hour of sun. The velvet texture adds a warmth that nylon or polyester cushions cannot match. It tricks the eye into thinking you are in a living room, not a concrete slab five stories up. The cushions are 50 centimeters wide each. They fit the sofa base exactly. I do not secure them with straps. They stay put because the velvet grips the seat surface.


Storage is the silent killer of small balcony projects. Where do you put the bedding when you are not using it? Where do the pillows live? My solution was a small bench with a hinged top. It sits at the foot of the sofa bed. Inside it holds two synthetic pillows, a wool throw blanket, and a set of sheets in a vacuum bag. The bench is 80 centimeters wide and 35 centimeters deep. It doubles as a side table for coffee mugs and a phone. I found it in a thrift shop for 20 euros. I painted it with exterior grade paint in matte black. It has survived two winters. The hinge rusted slightly. I replaced it with a stainless steel one for 4 euros. This bench took the stress out of my balcony design. I no longer had to drag bedding through the apartment every single day.


Rain will try to ruin your life. A friend of mine built a similar pull-out sofa setup on her balcony. She woke up at 3 AM with water dripping on her face. The difference was she skipped the protective layer. I installed a clear polycarbonate roof panel above the sofa area. It extends 40 centimeters past the sofa bed on all sides. The panel is anchored to the building wall with brackets that do not require drilling into the brick. I used heavy duty adhesive hooks rated for 50 kilograms each. The panel cost 30 euros. It stops 90 percent of rain. The remaining 10 percent is handled by the slatted frame and the foam mattress cover. This roof is not ugly. It is transparent. It lets light through. The velvet upholstery has never been wet.


The final piece was privacy. A balcony at street level or facing a neighbor needs screening. I hung a bamboo roll shade from the railing. It unrolls to 140 centimeters tall. It blocks direct sight lines from the apartment building next door. It also cuts wind by about half. When I want sun, I roll it up and tie it with leather straps. The bamboo has lasted 18 months so far. A few slats cracked in a storm. I replaced them with spares from the same roll. Total cost for the entire balcony design, including the sofa bed, foam mattress, deck tiles, roof panel, bench, cushions, and shade was 247 euros. My mother slept on it for twelve nights. She claimed it was more comfortable than my actual bedroom. I am not sure if that is true. But she did not complain once about the cold concrete or the neighbor playing guitar at midnight. The balcony became a room. And all it took was a click clack and a roll up mattress.

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