About Small Space Logic

Small Space Logic creates technical-lite, idea-driven guidance for people who want organized, high-flow, high-efficiency living in studios, tiny homes, and compact apartments, built with repeatable spatial systems, not just décor.

We’re the digital hub where architectural and engineering principles meet everyday residential reality. Small spaces aren’t a problem to tolerate, In fact, they’re a spatial puzzle to be engineered. We focus on turning inspiration into decisions you can implement.

Quick Facts

  • Brand focus: Small-space layout ideas, organization systems, and compact-home frameworks engineered for high-efficiency living
  • Built for: Studio apartments, tiny homes, micro-apartments, compact condos, multipurpose rooms
  • Method: Zoning-first + flow mechanics + modular integration (technical-lite, repeatable, realistic)
  • Founder & Lead Author: Oded Feigin
  • Editorial focus: Systems thinking, measurable decisions, real-world implementation
Small Space Logic Logo

Our Purpose

Compact homes shouldn’t feel “clever but cramped.” They should be:

  • Easier to live in every day (less friction, fewer bottlenecks)
  • Easier to keep organized (fast resets, storage that actually works)
  • More flexible (one room can do more without feeling chaotic)
  • Practical to implement (without expensive rework)

That’s what we mean by High-Efficiency Living in Every Inch.

Why We Exist

Online inspiration is endless, yet truly livable small spaces are rare.

People struggle with:

  • Layouts that look great but block movement
  • Storage solutions that collapse under real life
  • Multipurpose rooms that bleed functions (sleep/work/kitchen overlap)
  • Costly mistakes caused by wrong sequencing (buying furniture before defining zones)

Small Space Logic bridges the gap between inspiration and execution, so your home works like a system, not a set of disconnected ideas.

The Small Space Logic Approach

We use an engineering-led framework to make decisions clearer and outcomes more reliable.

1) Zoning Physics

We teach you how to create psychological + physical boundaries without building walls. Using the Logic of the Zone, you’ll learn how one space can serve as a kitchen, office, and bedroom, without functional bleed.

What it looks like in real life:

  • “Sleep zone” that stays calm even in a studio
  • “Work zone” with visual separation (not just a laptop on a table)
  • “Reset boundaries” so clutter doesn’t spread everywhere

2) Flow Mechanics

Every home has traffic lanes. We analyze movement patterns so everyday routines such as coffee, dressing, cooking, laundry, feel effortless rather than obstructed.

Typical flow fixes:

  • Eliminate pinch points at entry + kitchen
  • Improve turning radii and door-swing conflicts
  • define “no-surprise pathways” that reduce daily friction

3) Modular Integration

We treat furniture as components of a larger machine. Instead of buying random pieces, we focus on modular choices that scale with your needs and keep every square foot working at maximum efficiency.

Examples:

  • Modular storage that supports fast resets
  • Multiuse surfaces that don’t break flow
  • Adaptable layouts that survive lifestyle changes

Who We Serve

1) The Studio Specialist

Urban dwellers navigating the unique challenges of one-room living, including privacy, storage, sleep and work separation, and clear circulation.

2) The Tiny House Engineer

DIY builders and compact-home owners who want technical-lite spatial concepts they can apply without an architecture degree.

3) The Efficiency Enthusiast

Anyone looking to downsize their footprint while upscaling quality of life, with less space and a better system.

What We Cover

Our guides are built around real constraints (budget, maintenance, durability, landlord limitations, and daily routines), and they’re structured to be decision-friendly.

Typical topics include:

  • Studio apartment layouts (sleep/work/kitchen separation)
  • Tiny home flow planning (kitchen triangles, entry bottlenecks, storage logic)
  • Storage systems (vertical logic, hidden capacity, “fast reset” routines)
  • Modular furniture planning (components that integrate vs. clutter the system)
  • Multipurpose rooms (guest + office, living + dining, kids + work zones)
  • Rent-friendly upgrades (no-permit, reversible changes)
  • “Sequence-first” implementation (what to define before what you buy)

About the Founder

Oded Feigin is the Founder and Lead Author behind Small Space Logic. He writes with an engineering-first approach to residential space planning, balancing function, flow, maintainability, and real-world implementation.

His background includes:

  • Leadership across engineering, production, and after-sales operations (VP-level)
  • Planning, managing, and supervising residential construction and renovations
  • Formal education in Mechanical Engineering (B.Sc. + M.Sc., UCLA)

Editorial Standards and Trust

We publish guidance readers can rely on because it’s built on repeatable reasoning, not vibes:

  • Practical constraints first: Real homes, real budgets, realistic upkeep
  • Systems thinking: Frameworks that scale beyond one pretty photo
  • Implementation clarity: Steps, checklists, and common pitfalls
  • Outcome-first recommendations: Does it improve flow, zoning, and daily usability?

Affiliate Disclosure and Independence

Some pages may include affiliate links. Affiliate relationships do not influence our conclusions. We recommend products and solutions based on:

  • Criteria-based evaluation (flow impact, durability, maintainability)
  • Transparent tradeoffs (what it solves / what it doesn’t)
  • Reader-first practicality (not “best-seller-first”)

Contact Us

For questions, collaborations, or editorial feedback, contact us here.

FAQ

What makes a “systemized” small space different from a decorated one?

A systemized small space starts with zoning + flow + storage logic, then adds style. The result is easier to maintain, feels bigger in daily life, and adapts better as your needs change.

Can these frameworks work if I’m renting?

Yes. Many of the biggest gains come from layout sequencing, modular integration, and flow fixes, and not permanent construction.

Do you focus more on furniture or layout?

Layout and systems first: circulation, zone boundaries, storage strategy, and routine flow, Then furniture choices that support those fundamentals.

Is this only for tiny homes and studios?

No. The same logic applies to any compact footprint or multipurpose room. Such as guest rooms, home offices, small bedrooms, and small living/dining combos.

Where should I start if I feel overwhelmed?

Start with one routine (morning, cooking, getting ready, laundry) and map friction points. Then define zones and “traffic lanes” around that routine before you buy anything new