pingveno

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pingveno,

It is also important that it resizes well.

pingveno,

I had a mattress that I had directly on a cement floor in a basement. That was an expensive mistake. The mattress retained moisture because it couldn’t breath, contributing to it collapsing. A basic bed frame is cheap, makes the room look nicer, and provides extra storage space underneath.

I’ve been having some fun with my current setup. I have a bed, nightstand, desk, dresser, and closet in one room. It’s maybe a little cozy, but functional as long as I put some thought into it. I even have a nice space in the middle that I can pretend I use to work out in.

pingveno,

I would also be worried about them trapping moisture. Bed slats provide a nice gap for moisture to escape to.

pingveno,

I get where you’re coming from, especially when it’s something like OP’s post where it’s just a bed and some junk. But there’s a difference between spartan and efficient. A spartan setup doesn’t provide much functionality beyond the basics (sleep, clothing). An efficient setup might take reworking, but it squeezes a multitude of uses into a small to medium sized room.

pingveno,

Maybe it’s like that to accommodate putting in a window fan?

pingveno,

I’m a little late, but c/politicalhumor would have been a better fit.

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