Furniture meets robotics: superpower to show/hide what's used
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Robotics-engineer-turned-entrepreneur Hasier Larrea wants to give furniture superpowers. In response to rising rents and populations in global cities, he has created a tool to make small spaces work harder with robotics. orisystems.com
As head of Architectural Robotics research at the MIT Media Lab, Larrea spent 4 years developing strategies for “living large in a small space”: his team created an “army of furniture with superpowers” and built a 200 square-foot living laboratory focused on using mechatronics (electronics plus mechanical engineering).
Now, his company Ori- Japanese for “to fold”- has created robotic furniture that transforms into a bedroom, living room, or an office with the push of a button.
Ori System’s first offering (widely available in early 2017) is a morphing wall that divides any studio into separate spaces by pushing a button for one of the presets: living room, bedroom, and office (the lighting is also preset to change for the individual rooms). The unit, designed by Yves Béhar, resembles a large wall of shelves with a closet, drawers, pop-out desk, and a trundle-style bed which slides out automatically when the bedroom setting is pushed.
What makes the system function is fairly simple: a mechanical actuator to slide the bed and the wall, embedded sensors for safety (the furniture stops morphing if motion is detected, similar to a garage-door opener) and the computer portion leaves the system open to be upgraded with new apps (with future versions of the software, the unit could be controlled by voice or gestures). The furniture can be controlled by smartphone so users can set up their space before arriving home.
Ori is currently rolling out the product in three cities (Boston, Seattle, and Washington, D.C.), working directly with commercial and residential real estate developers (we filmed with him in Skanska’s Watermark Seaport building in Boston).
Larrea says that future iterations of the product will take advantage of vertical space by moving a bed or table to the ceiling when not in use. Ori is launching with two options- systems for a full, or queen, size bed- and customizable storage and cabinetry colors, but in the future, Larrea hopes that his creation will scale to serve even the DIY/maker community.
Original story: faircompanies.com/videos/furn...
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There's an issue with many of these moving-wall type houses which try to share space, which isn't being addressed - namely the psychology of using the same space for multiple purposes. Logically, it shouldn't make a difference, but practically (or emotionally perhaps), it often actually does make a difference. Interestingly, in many of these videos, the owners will often make a statement about their use of the space that amounts to the fact that they don't take full advantage of all the features (like not using the office even though it's there in this video, or one guy who claimed he never really used the apartment for much other than sleeping despite the fact that it was fully decked out and could be converted into multiple different types of spaces). The issue is the same issue you get when you have your bed in the same room as your desk - there are cues in our environment that often heavily influence our behaviour without our awareness. Trying to work on your bed or in your bedroom is likely to negatively influence both your sleep and your work. This doesn't necessarily make it impossible to use the same space for different purposes in practice, but it does mean that it may be a little bit more complicated than suspending a bed over your living room and then just dropping it down when it's time to go to sleep. Good design will need to explore ways to transform the appearance and feel of the space and possibly introduce artificial thresholds that replicate entering a new space in order to cue the new function that will need to be performed in that same space (eating / cooking / sleeping / showering / resting / working etc.) I'm finding this so incredibly fascinating and would be really interested to see more.
@nancybarbour1227
7 жыл бұрын
I like how moving the bed out of view, then opening the living room up to a larger area, feels more open and airy. If someone is disabled, as I am, and housebound, the psychological advantage of getting the bed and its mess of covers and pillows out of sight, and having a pleasant, open space, would help move that person into doing other activities besides reading or watching TV, things we associate with being in (or near) the bed all day. Of course, the wonderful windows are a big part of that! For those who spend a lot of time in a one-room apartment, there would be a real psychological advantage to putting the bed away, and this system does it whether you are able to do it yourself, or not!
@OktoPutsch
6 жыл бұрын
I see your point, FHD, something i didn't think about, and it's an interesting point of view. Makes me think how important is also the _transition_ to convert a space into a different room with the mood change that shall fits with. Light, shades, and shapes, but also textures. In example, we could figure a system able to learn daily habits and listen to the host to analyze subtle things dropped like mumbles "ok, i'm going to bed soon, enough for today", and while you're having a shower, everything is tidying and deploying. Once you're back and drying, the whole transformation is over and you enter a really different room. In someway, blending with psychology, we could see these concepts like we design video-games ergonomy. Need to talk about this with friends !
@OktoPutsch
6 жыл бұрын
( @ FHD, to resume, i see all of this as a *level design* exercice which can be kinda fun ! ^^ )
@teresaboze69
5 жыл бұрын
Completely agree. How is it that MIT is not producing people that understand interdisciplinary factors? This clawson gives credence to he term "educated idiot." I think that we have all proof positive we need that our environment is so toxic that we can no longer discern compromised endocrinology from a good idea.
@Mingyu1031
5 жыл бұрын
FHD فَهِد your point quite make sense. I live in a studio where the sofa is directly across the bed and I barely use any other furniture to create sense of functional zones. I still like the robotics part of this product though, because a lot of mobile partition/flexible furniture still require extra force and movement.
This would make things better for many disabled people. Our strength and balance can be unpredictable or absent right at the wrong time. I've got Parkinson's Disease. The folding of a futon can be too much for me right when I need to lay down flat, and I am six feet tall. Plus I'm not thin of frame.
@ms.5779
5 жыл бұрын
riftalope or older people whose strength has dismissed...I’m in my 50’s
my microwave is not a robot he is part of the family his name is James
@miragaiamaia8966
7 жыл бұрын
my vacuum cleaner is an elephant named Memories
@doublechin8088
7 жыл бұрын
my lube is not just lube she apart of my family and makes me very happy her name lucia
@Christianlvm22
7 жыл бұрын
hahahahahah
@sumbalqazafi5457
7 жыл бұрын
Bryan Arevalo hahha
@ghostbirdofprey
7 жыл бұрын
Chef Mike
I love seeing people who are enthusiastic about what they do. I can imagine using this type of robotic technology in my life, it captures what minimalists value.
This is one of the most interesting channels on KZread.
im just imagining someone trying to have dinner with friends and the thing just keeps moving around shooting lights and taking the table in and out because it gets triggered by all the words amd gestures hehe 😅
@descoiatorul
6 жыл бұрын
Imagine having to go to the bathroom while entertaining guests. That door is too translucent and that gap... The stuff of nightmares!!
Compacting furniture = bed, sofa, desk & etc. Smarthphone = camera, map, book, computer, telephone & etc
Kirsten I'm strangely in love with your videos I can't stop watching them lol
Love his enthusiasm and passion. Also love the fact that they're creating a platform for others to create.
I LOVE that one of their key design aspects seems to be ‘can I make my apartment into a disco’.
.. I like this. the idea of a set of modular building blocks you can put together and use to make the small spaces available in a city center more livable, functional -- another way to address it than custom built environments. .. I think of Bruce Willis' apartment in _The Fifth Element_ .. or there is a sequence in the Melissa Scott's novel _Trouble and Her Friends_ where a character walks into her apartment and reaches up into a network of optical sensors to turn on power and activate systems .. to those who remark this is a tool in the agenda to push people in some direction, control them .. living with this is a choice. just as living in a tiny house is a choice. you might have a point if this is the only type of system available.
This is by far my favorite video of your chanel! It translates many of my beliefs in the future of furniture design.
What if there is a power cut?
@scdobserver835
7 жыл бұрын
My first question too...
@admiralashfig2719
7 жыл бұрын
then youll have to sleep on the couch till the power is back
@Axelschultz1
7 жыл бұрын
You probably can still push them manually, they just might be a bit heavy.
@SoundMediaVibes
7 жыл бұрын
Not 'if' but when, an EMP even???
@WayneJohnsonZastil
7 жыл бұрын
You know you can get batteries right?
This guy is a great salesman 😂 Technology man, it’s beautiful :-)
lol imagine someone's taking a dump and all of a sudden some one move the walls around it hahaha.
Love it! And if MIT made it...it's the best. I'm 74 and already live in smaller space. Your energy hits me! The huge house is over. This i s amazing.
Amazing.. LOVE THIS!!! Great for older people or people who can't move something heavy. You make small places look larger and you can do many things in a small area.
I think it's in some ways very neat but really it's a high tech solution to a problem that's not going to improve your quality of life. For me, it's about removing complications. A simple, cozy bed area, a kitchen with a reasonable surface area and a table, and an open shower/bathroom. There you have everything you need which can all fit in a tiny space quite comfortably, without the need of an ugly, expensive, complicated machine.
He is so passionate about this. It’s great to watch. Would be great to see what they’ve come up with in the 3 years since this was uploaded.
"Honey, open the drawer. I want to sleep."
I like how you have to have your enitre house clean 24/7 for your furniture to even work propper. Great concept, you should try and live with it for a year and see how it holds up
@dorothydean8643
5 жыл бұрын
Try it for 2 months. 2 weeks with kids or a partner.
Transformable multi-use spaces is the key to tiny living. I've designed and built my own 240sqf tiny house with large french door fridge, huge shower, king bed, immense kitchen, etc. Too often we see tiny houses that make everything smaller, however, by building adaptable spaces one can use full size, or even super sized everything without the need to compromise.
This is your most underrated video in your channel. Just great!
This is by far one of the coolest things I've seen on the internet in a seriously long time.
i really love the idea of these moving walls. so cool. so intelligent. BUT not one of these hyper designed spaces take into account that I have winter clothes, summer clothes, weekend clothes, office clothes, books, makeup, snow boots, shoes, cats, letterboxes... etc...There are 6 hangers in their wardrobe and it is almost full !! not to mention that I like to cook and that means I have pots, pans, baking dishes as well as actual food. So these spaces are super intelligent but not livable as long term home apartments. but they would be cool as part of a house. In fact, President Jefferson made the prototype for all this with his bedroom/office in his Monticello home. Even my engineer PhD boyfriend was impressed by it. The spanish MIT student that presented the video is so smart and so cute. His parents must be so proud of him.
@chezmoi42
6 жыл бұрын
The point he made is that you can design the furniture to work as you need it to work. If you have a ton of clothing, allow for accomodation of the seasonal storage, or for items you rarely use. Raise the bed, for instance, and put drawers beneath it. No one design works for everyone. This was just an example of how the mechanisms can work. However, the process may also make us rethink how much of the stuff we own is really necessary.
For the heavy main wall this would be great, or for folks who for whatever reason can't move certain elements all of it. I love these ideas and how diverse ideas for using small spaces are. Well done for making it more accessible for more people.
This shifted my paradigm. Thank you.
I'm a simple man, I sleep in the living room and need no bedroom.
I am so sooo excited about this. Ever since I was 5 and watched 5th Element, I wished and wished that I could have an apartment like Bruce Willis' haha - and now if I just save up and contact this company, it can become a reality!!
Amazing use of space, great insights, really quality video
Awesome. I have been looking at automated mobile storage and transforming tiny apartments and how to put the two together, but never did I think of the garage door opener on the wall like this. Great innovation!
ladies and gents... THAT is called passion! I wouldnt mind working for them provided they gave me food and a place to stay. Honestly.
Its fun and games until the bed closing on its own when you sleep.
or you could just put handles on everything.
@thatboyscotty
7 жыл бұрын
and ruin the aesthetics of a clean surface!? *GASP!!!*
@admiralashfig2719
7 жыл бұрын
you didnt get the point
@laineydiamond
7 жыл бұрын
But then how do I make it super expensive and completely unsustainable tho?
@wjf213
7 жыл бұрын
I think he said something about that, and basically that most people are too lazy to do anything by hand after a few times. I mean would you buy a vehicle that had CRANKS for the windows or do you want power windows now or how about locking and unlocking your car with the old fashioned KEY? Plus with the general population living longer and getting older, the harder it gets to push and pull those "HANDLES" on everything.
@Synicizm
7 жыл бұрын
I like cranky windows. It gets hot here, and sometimes, you have to wait in a car you don't have the key to =/.
We all prefer to live with plenty of space. However, that is nowadays a luxury for most, so we have to adapt and leave in smaller spaces.The irony is, that we buy small places for not being able to afford bigger ones, and then all these systems and furniture for tiny apartments are tremendously expensive, leaving us mortals, pimping and adapting Ikea´s products...
Alexa (goes crazy):"Good morning! Is time to wake up" ....bed starts to roll in & pushing me into the floor. hehehe... Love this concept for studio living spaces!!
This is gold for real estate developers and efficient space usage... I mean it could bring standard and luxury to new levels.
You need to check back every year with Hasier. He is brilliant.
This totally blew my mind! So awesome. Imagine the iot possibilities..
perfect design you have the best channel with cool ideas. thanks
Wow love it! You always find such characters and interesting things!
absolutely inovative. regardless other synical negative remarks. this will be great for the future small apartments & high growing living cost
I've been looking for something like this for a few years, at least the simplified mechanics or in this case robotics. Very versatile.
Needless to say, it's an awesome idea 👍 plus a solution for the lack of places to live in big cities. Moreover, I could see this taking off in NYC, Hawaii, any place where space is limited for housing. Thank you for sharing this video... wishing you lots of success... Abrazos y hasta luego tio.
that is bloody amazing stuff..!!
great idea :) how wonderful for urban areas with limited space.
so if there is power outage in the middle of day, i won't have a bed. to sleep.
@tactiy
4 жыл бұрын
@Λ R V I D . R Σ H Π B Σ R G or battery backup and solar panels
If it's connected to the internet, it can be hacked.
@TheOwenMajor
7 жыл бұрын
Not true, you obviously don't have much knowledge.
@obsoleteoptics
7 жыл бұрын
+Owen Major Ad Hominem much?
@laineydiamond
7 жыл бұрын
Why would you connect your furniture to the internet you absolute fucking walnut
@TheOwenMajor
7 жыл бұрын
No, your statement is not true, therefor you are stupid. Not that you are stupid therefor you are not true.
@obsoleteoptics
7 жыл бұрын
+lainey marie Had you watched the video, he explained that.
It does save space and I like how it's so easy to be moved
i like his energy. a natural sales man.
Brilliant I need this in my flat great!!
Wow! This design is fantastic.
2:49 You can even do the limbo at this apartment!! Okay, i'm sold.
This is fabulous! Definitely the future.
I personally think it's brilliant. Our cities are so crowded and rent is so expensive. This is a genuinely clever way to deal with some of those problems.
I would like to see this adapted to an efficiency apartment in Assisted Living apartments. Of course Hospital beds are higher. So it would be take more height to hide the bed, but often storage space is limited there so this might be very useful.
Yes this is a great idea. This will make smaller spaces much more adaptable to needs. But I also hope there will be a power free option, because as super nifty as this is, there is always the possibility of power outages. We all better go solar!
I would just love having this kind of furniture in my appartment!
i wouldnt mind a bed that fits under the wardrobe... mounting my monitors to the back of the wardrobe is an idea i hadnt thought off. i'm adding that into my plans for a studio apartment. i dont need many things to move around. but these ideas are really helpful to keep stuff neat and as i go over 35 years old
This is a new level!
I wonder if they are putting some of their creativity towards RV Full Time spaces. That would be awesome.
all this is very interesting and cool, and dystopian at the same time.
I absolutely love your channel
i would love to see a episode with these tools retrofitted to one of the older video's houses
This is freaking awesome!
I guess this is why IKEA is getting into the smart-home space; it definitely makes sense given that people are struggling to stay afloat and are stuck downsizing. It's even more necessary for the most vulnerable members of society, who are both poorer and are more sensitive to their environment. Some German companies are doing amazing work in the kitchen spaces within this emerging 'smart-room' domain.
I think there are some really neat idea's here and I love that they are exploring them. However I am not so keen on having everything motorised. But I imagine there are number of people who would love to live in a space like this.
Good thing this is an iteration version because that thing will be difficult to get into 1 billion consumers hands wanting it. I have so many ideas that could push this goal. Even competitors are not pushing that far in maximising small space but rather the opposite and balanced.
This is so brilliant, I want it in my room lol
Wow this is amazing! i love this
Hats off to the technology where so much thought is given to conveniences & lack of space.. would it be practical, if introduced as a commercial venture, is to be seen. very interesting video. Thanks for sharing !👍👍
When the guy went into bed at 1:55 I pictured the mechanism retracting the bed by itself, making a human burrito in the process xD
Very nice, especially on black out
I like how the future looks like by seeing this video
and WHY are all beds so LOW these days ????
@charleswalker1185
4 жыл бұрын
I put my sofa, dresser, and bed on risers..
@persimoncino
4 жыл бұрын
I know, really bad for your knees when getting up in the morning, too much pressure on them. Especially when you get older!!!!!
@MrE073
4 жыл бұрын
'cause the market is DOWN 😅
Wow ! Its so nice and so very cool and interresting too sea this :-*. Thank you. Greats from Germany
By far my favorite!
This is soooooooo brilliant
You made my day ... thank you
I really like this idea, its elegant. My 1 bed flat is quite spacious but has almost no storage. I think it has a lot of wasted space following traditional set ups. I'd go for the manual movement option though. Save on electricity 😄
Awesome, now if i could have something similar done for a van or small trailer.
That is so amazing. I would love it in a small house.
When the power is out and you wanna sleep but its still transformed into your kitchen but your not ffking hungry
very innovative. Thumbs up!
really amazing stuff.
That couch moving is awesome, so great if you're having an argument and you can just start yelling backwards and make the person go away. Even better if you had an intercom system and could just start making the couch in another room move.
Anything that can make me feel like a Jedi is a win in my book.
JUST GREAT!!!!!!! EXCELENTE!!!!! TE FELICITO! ☺ Half English / Half Spanish (y Olé!)
sounds very passionate (:
Excelente para mim que sofri da coluna vertebral!!! ok sem palavras.
All I see that these people just did was make those motorized movable backroom store racks like the ones in Walmart for the masses! Those racks technically do just that! They move what's on them back & forth! The Walmart I used to work at, the assemblers bay was built into those rolling racks, which was a great space saver! Great job bringing this to the masses! PS: the rolling racks at Walmart was from lay-a-way but at the time I worked there, lay-a-way was canceled due too many people where abusing it by putting things on lay-a-way then canceling their order to just put it back on lay-a-way when the item went on sale or clearance then if it got another bigger sale/clearance they would cancel then put it back on at the lower price! Now, Walmart's lay-a-way is back but there are restrictions on what can go/when lay-a-way is available, plus many(nearly all walmarts) have a restocking fee of at least $20 or 20%(whatever is greater) which for us that does use lay-a-way the way it was to be used can still use it when we need too! Again, great idea for the masses, if/when I need/want to add these, I'm glad that there is someone out there that will make this easier for me to get this setup!
It would be really nice if you can override the system and push, pull or lift things if for example there's a power problem in the building or in the area you are living or if you just want to save some power.
All these systems shown here and in other videos are pretty fancy, but in the end they just free the area of a bed for another use during daytime.
Great vision! Has obvious problems but great idea.
Never understand why people have to be so negative. It's not like anyone is forcing you to live here. Plus, the human population is growing so we have to be better about how we use our space We can't just keep expanding and destroying nature. Think about it, do people really NEED a formal dining room? Even if you use it every meal, that's only like 6 hours a day you're using it. Why not utilize the space better? The whole point of these companies is to make every inch count instead of having building 2000sqft homes where only 10% of the space is being used at any given time. Yes, it does mean homes become very cookie cutter and decorating is limited but if these designs meant would mean more people could get affordable modern homes then are you going to be selfish and say NO just because so that you have a living room that no one uses?
@RobbsHomemadeLife
7 жыл бұрын
Only a part of the human population is growing. Every western nation is showing a decline in the native-born population. Africa will have 4 billion people by the end of the century while most other places will have shown a decline.
@kismetau
7 жыл бұрын
Although the population in first world countries is decreasing on average, there is an increasing number of people moving to urban areas like Manhattan and paying premium prices for every square footage. For those people, l think this and other ideas suit them (who are mostly professionals with no kids) as they can get the most value out of the space they are paying for
@MrBeaux
7 жыл бұрын
There's nothing wrong with people scaling back, and doing more with less... but the whole transforming furniture thing feels awfully dystopian to me.
@MrBeaux
7 жыл бұрын
Space is something humans need. Like I said, there's nothing wrong with scaling back and relying on less space, I think that's a good thing. I'm subscribed to this channel, so I'm obviously interested in small houses and that sort of thing. However, when you reach a point where you've given up so much space that you have to rely on transforming furniture (with pointless robotics) to meet your needs, it seems like too little.
@carmenkemp6150
7 жыл бұрын
Just out of curiosity why do you say that people need space in their home (I assume that's what you mean when you say ''space is something humans need'')? If you need space just go outside, plenty of space. You spend most of your day at work, away from home so why would you need space? Shouldn't it just be enough to have a bed, kitchen, bathroom and a couch in just one space with a divider? This way you can physically go from one place into another without leaving a room.
Fantastic idea!
This system is awesome
It will be good to be able to push the items both manually and electronically so that to reduce electrical usage even when it's switched off or whenever there's electricity getting cut off we are still able to operate it manually
@kismetau
7 жыл бұрын
I think he said they can customize this & l agree that should be an option
AWESOME!!
Unbelievable!! great ideas !!! Any distributor in Brazil? please let us know the contacts.