Workers adjust a gate in front of one of the world’s narrowest houses, in Warsaw, Poland

Workers adjust a gate in front of one of the world’s narrowest houses, in Warsaw, Poland, Friday, Oct. 19, 2012. (AP Photo/Alik Keplicz)

  • Must See Video
Coast Guard rescues sailor southeast of Cape Cod
Coast Guard rescues sailor at Cape Cod

The Coast Guard rescued a sailor from his disabled vessel …

Soldier surprise... with a twist
Soldier surprise... with a twist

Soldier returns from year in Afghanistan to find a new house …

Ducklings saved with cell phone app
Ducklings saved with cell phone app

A cell phone app is credited for saving two ducklings. The baby…

Woman takes on bear, saves husband
Woman takes on bear, saves husband

A Wisconsin man is recovering after being attacked by a black …

Car smacks into parked car, sends it into pool
Car smacks another car into pool

Surveillance video catches a wrong way driver in Ft. …

Advertisement

Narrow house opens as art work in Warsaw

Updated: Tuesday, 23 Oct 2012, 8:04 AM EDT
Published : Tuesday, 23 Oct 2012, 8:04 AM EDT

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — The new house is only four feet wide (1.2 meters), but it comes with a bathroom, a kitchen and a bedroom.

Architect Jakub Szczesny said he designed the two-story aluminum and plastic house three years ago to fill a narrow space between a pre-war house and a modern apartment block in downtown Warsaw.

The Foundation of Polish Modern Art and Warsaw Town Hall helped fund the project, which they consider an art work.

But it may not be easy for the tenants.

The triangular building runs 33 feet (10 meters) deep at the base and stands 30 feet (9 meters) tall.

Metal and aluminum pipes hold the structure nearly 10 feet (3 meters) above the ground, and visitors will climb a metal staircase and squeeze through a hole to enter the building.

The ground floor contains a toilet and shower, a kitchen with a sink and cupboards, a table for two, and a bean bag sofa. Another metal ladder goes to the second floor, which has a nearly double-size bed, a table and a chair.

Szczesny told a news conference that the building achieves two goals: filing an empty city space and linking Warsaw's World War II tragedy, when more than half the city was destroyed, with modern buildings that went up afterward.

The first tenant was to move in Saturday: Etgar Keret, an Israeli writer whose ancestors died in Poland during the Holocaust.

"It is a kind of a memorial to my family," said Keret, explaining that his mother's and father's families died in the Holocaust under Nazi Germany's occupation of Poland, and his paternal grandfather died in Warsaw's 1944 uprising against the Nazis.

The structure has been named Keret House after the Israeli writer.

He said he only visits Warsaw twice a year, so other tenants will be able to try out the tight quarters of the non-profit building for free, too.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Advertisement