- cross-posted to:
- photography@fedia.io
- photography@fedia.io
- cross-posted to:
- photography@fedia.io
- photography@fedia.io
Hallway, NYC, 2014.
All the pixels, but nowhere to put them, at https://www.flickr.com/photos/mattblaze/13337114073
#photography
Captured with a small mirrorless camera and 50mm lens.
This hallway reminded me of a sight gag in the Coens’ “Inside Llewyn Davis”. I like that the two neighbors have to share a doormat.
The starkly bare hallway and contrasting tones between the walls and the doors and floor make this as much a study in abstract shapes as it is about urban living.
“Who designed this?” you might ask.
Small NYC brownstones such as the one shown here were generally either built from the start as multi-family tenements, or were built as single-family homes and later subdivided into apartments. In the former case, the layout into individual units was part of the original design and generally fairly sane. In the latter case, landlords often tried to squeeze every square inch of rentable space out of the existing layout, at the expense of things like hallways.
@mattblaze@federate.social
The first place I lived in NYC was originally designed to be 6 floors x 2 relatively spacious apts. when I lived there, it had been divided into 4 600 sq/ft apts per floor.@mattblaze@federate.social I mean you can’t sleep in a hallway now can you ?
At USC there used to be a design contest at the Architecture school for putting the maximum number of living spaces into the smallest number of square feet. Each ‘unit’ had to support two adults, cooking, bathing, a bathroom, and a place to sleep.
One of the students called it ‘smooshed camping’ which sort of stuck with me.
@mattblaze@federate.social I bet when the fire alarm goes off the neighbors run out and collide like a slapstick comedy.
Looking at the floor tiles it seems to be about 30" wide. I wonder if anyone has a fridge or a couch.