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Why Most Apartments Are Still Designed for Couples (Even When You’re Not One)
In New York City, only 36.2 percent of households are married, while 64 percent are unmarried, according to household data from Statistical Atlas. Yet when you look at how most apartments are designed, the assumptions tell a different story.
Inly Alvarez
Feb 243 min read


Designing a Home for One Person Without Feeling Like You’re Missing Something
Many solo homes are shaped around absence. An extra chair kept just in case. A table chosen for future guests. A layout that feels more like preparation than presence. Over time, this can create a subtle sense that something is lacking, even when life itself feels full.
Inly Alvarez
Feb 233 min read


What NYC’s Housing Stats Reveal About the Way We Actually Live Today
If nearly one in three New Yorkers lives alone, you would expect housing layouts to respond to that. Instead, many apartments still assume s
Inly Alvarez
Feb 94 min read


Emotional Design: What Kind of Home Do You Need When You Are Living Alone?
Yet most homes are still imagined around couples, families, or shared living. When you live alone, this mismatch becomes visible very quickly. Spaces feel oversized or oddly segmented. Furniture feels performative instead of useful. Rooms feel unfinished, even when they are furnished. This is where emotional design becomes essential.
Inly Alvarez
Feb 94 min read
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