Cristina Iore e Gabriele Gagliardi

Inside the tiny apartment in Berlin designed by Cristina Iore and Gabriele Gagliardi of COES STUDIO.

Foto di Riccardo Rudi.

How extraordinary can it be to live in a few square meters, when every inch is carefully designed to meet every need? Often it is small spaces that stimulate creative solutions: their limitations become opportunities. Such is the case with this tiny apartment in Berlin of just 35 square meters designed by COES Studio in collaboration with designer and owner Guillaume Vaslin. Located on the second floor of an altbau building, the apartment retained the typical irregular geometries of the early twentieth century: fragmented rooms, dimly lit corners, and inefficient circulations, features that made it difficult to use on a daily basis. The challenge of the project was not only aesthetic, but deeply functional: ‘redefining space, creating fluid pathways, and enhancing every corner to multiply the perception of spaciousness.’

Inspiration starts in Paris and Tokyo

The architects redesigned the apartment with the aim of bringing order, light and warmth, transforming every inch into a more harmonious living experience. The project thus takes inspiration from cities like Paris and Tokyo, where the ability to live well in small spaces has developed a culture of optimisation and attention to detail. Here, every choice is designed to make the environment more welcoming and functional: from the reflective surfaces and the arrangement of furniture to the integrated storage systems, everything contributes to creating a balance between aesthetics and practicality. Living in 35 square meters does not mean limiting yourself: it means discovering how ingenuity and design can transform even the smallest of spaces into a generous and surprisingly liveable home.

parete attrezzata letto a scomparsa

All’interno del volume trovano posto il letto, la libreria e il divano inserito su una pedana mobile. Tutto ovviamente studiato su misura.

Foto di Riccardo Rudi.Storage walls and moving platforms

At the heart of the project is a continuous architectural volume running along the wall opposite the kitchen, conceived as a true multifunctional element that can accommodate the main activities of daily life. With its 60 cm depth, this ‘second layer‘ elegantly integrates the bed, a bookcase, and a sofa on a movable platform. The exterior is presented as a uniform wall, interrupted only by large storage spaces concealed by an ingenious ‘push and open’ system, which allows it to maintain order and visual lightness. The solution recalls Le Corbusier’s ‘dwelling cell’ and the poetic functionality of Franco Albini’s ‘Room for a Man,’ where each object has its precise place and nothing is left to chance.