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Adaptive Interiors: Exploring and Applying Principles from The Metabolism Movement to Furniture and Spatial Design in Residential Architecture

dc.contributor.advisorVon Starck, Adrian
dc.contributor.authorRadoslavova, Mila
dc.contributor.departmentInterior Architecture/Interior Design (BA)
dc.contributor.otherBerlin International University of Applied Sciences
dc.date.accessioned2025-12-09T09:57:59Z
dc.date.available2025-12-09T09:57:59Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.description.abstractThis thesis explores how principles if the Metabolism Movement can be applied on a smaller scale in interior and furniture design. A movement that emerged in post-war Japan imagining cities as an organic model that can adapt and evolve with its user. Building on this concept, this research investigates different strategies used in the original movement, can fit into contemporary residential design. Through theoretical guidelines and case studies throughout different mediums ranging in size and typology, the study examines how Metabolist ideas have persisted through time and transformed into design systems and open-source practices. These insights are translated into a design proposal for a vertical student village in Berlin.
dc.description.degreeBA
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.berlin-international.de/handle/123456789/1174
dc.subjectMetabolism
dc.subjectmodularity
dc.subjectprefabrication
dc.titleAdaptive Interiors: Exploring and Applying Principles from The Metabolism Movement to Furniture and Spatial Design in Residential Architecture
dc.typeThesis
dspace.entity.typePublication

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