How Industrial Style Started
The Origins of the Industrial Style House & Industrial Style Apartment
With the lack of affordable housing in large cities, enterprising people found a way to turn abandoned industrial spaces into apartments. This trend is thought to have started in Lower Manhattan, in the late 1960s when artistic types rented the spaces as studios and then turned them into their homes.
Because they were working from scratch in what was a large skeleton of a building, the usual methods of creating living spaces didn't apply. They used this blank canvas to chop the big areas into lofts – large, open apartments with few (if any) internal walls, high ceilings and, often, floor-to-ceiling windows. They kept the industrial bones of the buildings by incorporating their functional features: exposed piping, ventilator tubes, support beams and poles, and wood or concrete floors.
Key Elements of Industrial Style
Industrial Home Design
Industrial Style's Evolution
The Aesthetics of the Industrial Style House
Introducing Industrial Style to Your Home
Industrial Decor Ideas
By adding a few of the signature features of industrial style, you can easily bring this decor into your home:
- Because industrial style works best in wide-open spaces, remove all the nonessential elements.
- If you're renovating, consider using materials in the industrial style, such as exposed brick walls, concrete floors and exposed beams. Let the unrefined, raw edges speak for themselves.
- Your furniture and accessories should emphasize the primary materials of this style: wood and metal with clean, uncluttered lines. Look for furniture and accessories that combine these materials in unique ways.
Industrial's simple-yet-edgy vibe that doesn't sacrifice comfort is ideal for our modern world. Even with small things like industrial-style lighting fixtures, wall art and metal accents on distressed wood furniture, you can emulate this decor wherever you live.
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Editorial Disclaimer: Articles featuring tips and advice are intended for educational purposes and only as general recommendations. Always practice personal discretion when using and caring for furniture, decor and related items.