The Safe House is something of a paradox: - a residence that is light, ethereal and open to the outward interjection to windows both countless and large, and nonetheless roughly unfit to break into. How is this done? By the illusion power of Transformers.
The home, written by Polish architects KWK Promes, exists in two states. When you are at home and feeling safe, you leave it open in "vulnerable" mode. One side of the residence is all glass, and the open-plan interior is open to the outward world. There is even a drawbridge at second-floor turn opposite to other office building housing an indoor pool.
But at the initial pointer of difficulty - over assertive trick-or-treaters, for e.g. - you strike a symbol and the residence goes in to lockdown, branch from home in to fortress. A shiver slams down, safeguarding the front of the house, outrageous solid slabs pitch in to block up the windows, and the drawbridge is hoisted up, isolating the office building completely.
Who on earth would wish such a home?
Organized criminals? Drug lords? Randy and Evi Quaid ? Or only your plain, familiar or grassed area U.S paranoid? In fact, it is only an overly prudent customer on the suburbs of Warsaw.
It seems to me that the most appropriate way to prevent the need for a anxiety room (panic house?) is to live in a nation where home invasions do not exist i.e wherever in the world solely the US. But as somebody who has far as well many gadgets, we can conclude the need for safety when I'm not at home. If we lived in this extraordinary chunk of a house, I'd be able to take off for a couple weeks of eighth month and not fret about burglars.
On the other hand, we would outlay the whole time troubling about losing my keys.
Safe House [KWK Promes around Home Designing ]
See Also:
Indestructible Mobile Home Keeps Out Mad Max, Zombies
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