Paradoxically, enclosing a bed can add a sense of space and although this is hardly a new idea, it none the less remains and individual one. From medieval times, the enclosed bed was found in simple house across Europe; extremely practical it was built against a wall or within an alcove, sometimes with cupboard around it. Thus enclosed on three sides, the bed alcove was rendered entirely private during the day by means of curtain or sometimes a pair of shutters. Like many old ideas, this one still has numerous applications in the modern world a built in bed can be closed off, with or without the addition of storage space to either side or above and below, and placed either in its own room or within a larger living area.
The ultimate built-in bed must be one that is invisible. Beds that are made as one until and seen only when needed have developed in sophistication since the first days of the rolling truckle or folding camp bed that could be shoved into a cupboard. The wall hug bed has benefited greatly from modern technology, and today such beds can be found in many guises from the basic bed that simply pulls down, to the bed which come from as part of a modular, decorative storage unit. Although such units are rarely the sign terms the base surface that is visible to the room can usually be well disguised painted, decorated, hug with picture, or otherwise treated in manner that unites it with the rest of the room.
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