flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Robotic interiors: How to make a studio apartment feel as big as a one-bedroom unit

Multifamily Housing

Robotic interiors: How to make a studio apartment feel as big as a one-bedroom unit

Meet Ori Living's robotically controlled, space-saving furniture system. 


By Robert Cassidy, Editor, Multifamily Design+Construction | July 17, 2019
Robotic interiors: How to make a studio apartment feel as big as a one-bedroom unit

Ori Studio Suite comes with a full or queen bed, a dining table or desk, a 50- or 60-inch TV nook, up to 133 cubic feet of storage, 48 to  60 inches of space to hang clothes, LED lighting, six outlets, and two USB ports. The system “adds” up to 136 of usable square footage to the unit. Cost: $7,000 to $15,000, depending on order quantity. Photo: Ori Living

What if furniture could have superpowers?

That’s the concept Hasier Larrea toyed with as he and his fellow MIT Media Lab graduate students—Carlos Rubio, Chad Bean, and Ivan Fernandez de Casadevante—explored how to use robotics to make interior spaces more efficient and usable.

That inquiry led to the founding four years ago of Boston-based Ori, Inc., which has developed two robotically controlled, space-saving furniture systems: Ori Studio Suite (and its Studio Suite Slim version), a movable structure that holds a bed, desk, table, and TV nook and has room for storage; and Ori Pocket Closet, which comes with similar accoutrements minus the bed.

 

SEE ALSO: What multifamily developers are saying about Ori Living's robotic interior system

 

To date, Ori has installed nearly 100 of its robotic furniture systems in more than 25 apartment buildings, primarily in Boston, Chicago, Miami, and San Francisco—cities where affordable rentals are scarce. But it took the inventor most of the decade to get market acceptance for what originally seemed like a pie-in-the-sky technology.

Larrea grew up in San Sebastián, in Spain’s Basque region. He played fútbol for Real Sociedad through high school and went on to earn BS and MS degrees in mechanical engineering at the University of Navarra. In 2011, he got an opportunity to work with Kent Larson, Director of the City Science research group at the MIT Media Lab.

Larrea and Larson challenged themselves to go beyond traditional thinking about interior spaces as “assigned” to a single function—a bedroom only, a living room only. “We wanted to bring mechanics software and control into a moving wall, to remove the physical constraints so that you could use as much of the space as possible,” said Larrea. They called the new field of research “robotic interiors.”

 

 

Starting in 2014 or so, Larrea, aided by his fellow grad students, developed several prototypes, many of them inspired by their work at MIT’s LEGO Mindstorms. The next crucial step was to standardize the product. “We wanted to create a kit of parts, so that every time we had a new idea—for electronics, or software, or safety—we wouldn’t have to start from scratch.” Standardization, they believed, was crucial to the success of the system. “There are only so many ways you can move things in three dimensions,” said Larrea.

After graduating from the MIT program in 2015, Larrea launched the company through the MIT delta v student entrepreneurship program. His thesis reviewer, the Media Lab’s Nicholas Negroponte, introduced him to industrial designer Yves Behar, whose FuseProject team came up with the brand name for the product: “ori,” a Japanese term meaning “to fold” (think “origami”).

Ori rented an apartment in Boston’s Seaport district to test the product. “We got random people to stay for a weekend over a two-year period, to see what they liked and didn’t like,” said Larrea. “The system proved to be incredibly robust.” After rigorous safety testing  the system has been certified by UL.

I asked Larrea why the big furniture makers didn’t come up with such a system. “Furniture makers and robotics people don’t understand each other,” he said. “That’s where we saw the potential to bring these two fields together.”

Next up: The Ori “Cloud Bed,” a robotically controlled bed that descends from the ceiling, deus ex machina–style.

 

Ori Studio Suite in daytime position (top) and in nighttime position (bottom). Photos: Ori Living

 

Ori Pocket Closet in closed position (top). It opens (via black button) for access to clothes, etc. (above). Pocket Closet comes with 110 cubic feet of storage, 140 inches of hanging space, a desk, 48-inch TV nook, LED lighting, three outlets, and two USB ports and adds the equivalent of 40 square feet of usable space to an apartment. Cost: $3,000 to $7,000. Photos: Ori Living

Related Stories

| Jun 19, 2013

New York City considers new construction standards for hospitals, multifamily buildings

Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s administration has proposed new building codes for hospitals and multifamily dwellings in New York City to help them be more resilient in the event of severe weather resulting from climate change.  

| Jun 17, 2013

DOE launches database on energy performance of 60,000 buildings

The Energy Department today launched a new Buildings Performance Database, the largest free, publicly available database of residential and commercial building energy performance information.

| Jun 13, 2013

AIA partners with industry groups to launch $30,000 'Designing Recovery' design competition

The program will award a total of $30,000 to three winning designs, divided equally between three locations: Joplin, Mo., New Orleans, and New York. 

| Jun 12, 2013

5 building projects that put the 'team' in teamwork

The winners of the 2013 Building Team Awards show that great buildings cannot be built without the successful collaboration of the Building Team. 

| Jun 11, 2013

Vertical urban campus fills a tall order [2013 Building Team Award winner]

Roosevelt University builds a 32-story tower to satisfy students’ needs for housing, instruction, and recreation.

| Jun 11, 2013

Finnish elevator technology could facilitate supertall building design

KONE Corporation has announced a new elevator technology that could make it possible for supertall buildings to reach new heights by eliminating several problems of existing elevator technology. The firm's new UltraRope hoisting system uses a rope with a carbon-fiber core and high-friction coating, rather than conventional steel rope.

| Jun 5, 2013

USGBC: Free LEED certification for projects in new markets

In an effort to accelerate sustainable development around the world, the U.S. Green Building Council is offering free LEED certification to the first projects to certify in the 112 countries where LEED has yet to take root.

| Jun 4, 2013

SOM research project examines viability of timber-framed skyscraper

In a report released today, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill discussed the results of the Timber Tower Research Project: an examination of whether a viable 400-ft, 42-story building could be created with timber framing. The structural type could reduce the carbon footprint of tall buildings by up to 75%.

| Jun 3, 2013

6 residential projects named 'best in housing design' by AIA

The Via Verde mixed-use development in Bronx, N.Y., and a student housing complex in Seattle are among the winners of AIA's 2013 Housing Awards.

| Jun 3, 2013

Construction spending inches upward in April

The U.S. Census Bureau of the Department of Commerce announced today that construction spending during April 2013 was estimated at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $860.8 billion, 0.4 percent above the revised March estimate of $857.7 billion.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021