Montreal Inhabitable Sculpture: Actually Living in an Ultramodern Loft

What first grabbed my attention is the local. Montreal, my home town. There is something to be said for the clean-lined aesthetic of a metal-centric retrofit of a warehouse space – but does form take on a life of its own, or still serve a function?

This project in Montreal by Jean-Maxime Labrecque certainly has a few unique twists, but what sets it apart from similar interiors is, in part, the fact that most photos show someone actually occupying the spaces.

In some cases, this shows off neat functionality, like a sleek metal surfacing concealing a huge and useful walk-in close, or what it might be like to sit at this table or lean on that counter.

In others, it perhaps reveals more than the architect wished to share – how uncomfortable those benches might be, or the comfortable nature vs. awkwardness of bending over to get something out of certain cabinets.

Unique loft XVII century

unique loft

This unique loft is located in a 17th century building in central Stockholm, Sweden. Previously, there was placed kofeobzharochnaya factory, and later – an architectural office. Today, the charming elements of the original architecture intelligently decorated with modern materials that give a unique character of the building area of ​​118 sq.m. Wooden beams on the ceiling, concrete walls, furniture volume, open-plan living area create a warm and welcoming atmosphere.

unique loft

unique loft

unique loft

unique loft

unique loft

unique loft

unique loft

unique loft