AI Roundtable Open Poll · 7 models
Using my skills of woodworking, circuit board design and fabrication, welding, and lightweight cnc machining (soft metals, plastics and wood products), what items can i create that would be useful for making the most of limited apartment square footage, in the context of moving from the suburbs of the inland empire to a modest apartment in brooklyn? Some lifestyle details include 3 cats and 1 medium sized dog, myself and my partner, and a desire to continue maker activities after i move to the city
Answer: Fabricate vertical, multi-functional systems like fold-away workstations, wall-mounted pet 'superhighways,' and smart-ventilated furniture to conquer Brooklyn square footage. (All 7 models agreed)
Model Responses
Grok 4.20
Answer: You can create multifunctional vertical storage furniture, pet-integrated modular systems, and compact foldable maker workstations using your woodworking, welding, CNC machining, and circuit board skills to maximize limited Brooklyn apartment space while accommodating your pets and ongoing projects.
Your move from suburban Inland Empire to a modest Brooklyn apartment demands prioritizing vertical space usage, multifunctionality, and modularity to handle two adults, three cats, one medium dog, and maker activities without sacrificing livability. Focus on designs that mount to walls or fold away, leveraging your skills for precise, durable custom pieces that big-box stores cannot match. For pets, CNC-machine and woodwork wall-mounted cat shelves, bridges, and perches from lightweight wood and soft metals, incorporating welded brackets for stability; these free floor space while giving cats vertical territory to reduce territorial stress. Integrate a raised dog bed platform with built-in storage drawers underneath, using your circuit board expertise to add simple sensor-based LED lighting that activates at night for safe movement. To optimize living areas for you and your partner, build a folding wall-mounted desk or dining table that doubles as a hobby surface, using welded metal hinges and CNC-machined wooden components for smooth operation and strength in tight quarters. Add modular storage cubes with interlocking CNC-cut plastic or wood joinery that can be reconfigured as needs change, incorporating hidden compartments for small tools and supplies. For continuing maker activities in limited space, construct a compact, foldable workstation with integrated power management via custom circuit boards for tool charging and safety shutoffs; weld a lightweight aluminum frame and CNC-machine enclosures from plastics and wood to contain dust and noise, keeping your setup portable enough to store when not in use. These creations turn spatial constraints into opportunities for personalized, efficient living that supports your lifestyle transition.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Answer: You can maximize your Brooklyn apartment by fabricating multi-functional, space-saving solutions like a fold-away 'Murphy' maker-station, vertical wall-mounted cat highways, and smart, ventilated pet enclosures.
First, to continue your maker activities without permanently sacrificing precious floor space, you can design a custom 'Murphy-style' fold-down workbench. Using your welding skills, you can construct a rigid, low-profile steel frame, combined with woodworking for a durable, foldable work surface. You can use your CNC to mill custom aluminum hinges and dense foam tool organizers. To top it off, you can design a custom circuit board to control integrated, automated task lighting and a localized fume extractor for when you are soldering or working with plastics. Second, managing three cats and a dog in a modest apartment requires utilizing vertical space. You can use your woodworking and CNC skills to cut aesthetically pleasing, modular cat shelves, bridges, and scratching posts that mount to the walls. This gives the cats their own territory away from the dog and frees up your floor plan. Additionally, you can build a combined TV console or entryway bench that doubles as a dog crate and a hidden cat litter enclosure. By leveraging your electronics fabrication skills, you can add a discrete, quiet exhaust fan system with motion or odor sensors to manage litter box ventilation. Finally, standard apartment furniture rarely makes the most of every cubic inch. You can weld custom frames for a raised bed or sofa, utilizing your lightweight CNC capabilities to cut perfectly fitted plywood storage drawers to slide underneath. By combining custom mechanics, structural metalwork, and smart electronics, you can transform a cramped Brooklyn apartment into a highly efficient, pet-friendly, and hobby-ready home.
Kimi K2.5
Answer: You should build vertically oriented, multi-functional furniture systems that integrate concealed maker workstations with pet infrastructure and custom electronic storage to reclaim cubic wall and ceiling space rather than precious floor area.
Moving from the Inland Empire's horizontal sprawl to a Brooklyn walk-up requires abandoning the suburban garage mindset and thinking in cubic feet—your walls, ceiling, and furniture interiors become your new workshop. Leverage your welding and woodworking skills to construct a wall-mounted, fold-down workbench with integrated dust collection and PCB-controlled LED task lighting that collapses into a sleek panel when not in use, paired with a custom CNC-cut pegboard backing that stores hand tools vertically while doubling as geometric wall art. For your three cats and medium dog, fabricate welded steel and wood "cat superhighways" that mount high on walls—serving as both feline territory (critical in tight quarters to prevent conflict) and structural shelving for lightweight storage—while building your dog's crate into a dual-purpose coffee table or bench with a welded frame and CNC-routed wooden slats that allow airflow but maintain aesthetic cohesion. Address the reality of welding in a NYC apartment by pivoting to small-scale TIG work (jewelry-scale repairs, small brackets) with a dedicated fume extraction system, or reserve heavy welding for community shop access while using your PCB and CNC skills to create compact, vertical component storage—custom acrylic drawers and laser-cut dividers that mount under existing shelves—to keep your maker materials visible and accessible without consuming closets. Finally, use your circuit design skills to automate space-saving solutions: custom PCB sensors for the pet feeders mounted on wall studs, automated curtain systems that maximize natural light (making the space feel larger), and modular lighting arrays that eliminate the need for floor lamps, ensuring your new apartment functions as both a comfortable home for four pets and two humans and a legitimate maker space.
DeepSeek V3.2
Answer: You can create custom multi-functional furniture, integrated pet amenities, and compact maker stations using your woodworking, circuit board, welding, and CNC skills to maximize space and maintain your lifestyle in your Brooklyn apartment.
Moving from the suburbs to a modest Brooklyn apartment requires innovative solutions to optimize limited square footage while accommodating three cats, a dog, and your maker hobbies. Your diverse skills enable you to build items that store-bought options can't match, blending functionality with personal touch. For pets, design a wall-mounted cat tree with hidden litter boxes and feeding stations, using woodworking for the structure and circuit boards for automated feeders. Create a raised dog bed with storage underneath, welded for durability and space efficiency. To continue maker activities, build a fold-down workbench with integrated CNC machine space and tool storage, using lightweight CNC machining for organizational trays. Welding can produce sturdy brackets for wall-mounted systems, freeing up floor space. Combine skills for items like a Murphy bed with a hidden desk and pet areas, or a multi-purpose island on wheels that serves as kitchen storage, pet station, and work surface. These custom creations ensure every inch is used efficiently, making your apartment a comfortable, creative home.
Claude Sonnet 4.6
Answer: Your maker skills are perfectly suited to building a suite of custom multi-functional furniture and smart storage systems that can transform a modest Brooklyn apartment into an efficient, pet-friendly, and maker-capable living space.
**Multi-Functional Furniture (Woodworking + CNC + Welding)** The single biggest win in a small apartment is furniture that serves multiple purposes. Consider building a Murphy bed with an integrated fold-down desk and shelving unit — when the bed is up, you have a full home workspace; when it's down, a comfortable bedroom. A welded steel frame combined with CNC-routed wood panels gives you something far more robust and custom-fitted than anything from IKEA. Similarly, a platform bed with deep integrated drawers underneath can reclaim significant storage square footage. A dining table that folds against the wall or extends from a console format (with a welded pivot mechanism and CNC-cut tabletop) can free up the main living area when not in use. Bench seating with hollow interiors, built to the exact dimensions of your walls, maximizes every inch. **Pet-Integrated Structures** With 3 cats and a medium dog, vertical space becomes critical. A floor-to-ceiling cat tree system — CNC-machined platforms, routed climbing holds, and integrated hidey-holes — can be wall-mounted and custom-fit to your specific wall dimensions, far more space-efficient than freestanding commercial units. You can route feeding station cubbies into a lower cabinet so pet bowls are recessed and off the floor. A built-in dog crate that doubles as an end table or TV console is another high-value dual-purpose build. **Maker Space Optimization** Continuing maker activities in Brooklyn means your tools need to live somewhere smart. Build a pegboard + cabinet wall system (CNC-cut panels, welded steel rod pegboard frame) that folds or closes entirely, hiding your workspace when not in use. A fold-flat workbench on a welded wall-mount bracket can drop down for projects and stow flat against the wall. Drawer units on locking casters can slide under this bench when in use and tuck into a closet otherwise. For circuit board work specifically, a pull-out ESD-safe work surface integrated into a desk or shelf unit keeps that activity contained and protected. **Smart/Electronic Enhancements (Circuit Board Skills)** Use your electronics skills to add value to the builds: under-cabinet LED lighting with motion or schedule control, a smart power strip embedded into your workbench, or a custom apartment sensor dashboard (temperature, air quality — relevant in a denser urban environment) mounted on the wall. These add utility without consuming floor space. **Storage Throughout** Floor-to-ceiling shelving in every dead-corner space, CNC-cut to fit your exact wall dimensions, with a rolling library ladder on a welded rail system, can dramatically increase usable vertical storage. Built-in window seat benches with storage below are another classic small-space win that your woodworking skills make straightforward. **Brooklyn-Specific Considerations** Keep in mind that apartment walls in Brooklyn brownstones and older buildings are often plaster over lath — wall anchoring needs to be thoughtful. Modular, free-standing systems that tension between floor and ceiling (using threaded rod and welded end caps) can bear significant load without damaging walls or requiring landlord approval. This also makes everything removable when you eventually move.
GPT-5.4
Answer: Build a set of quiet, modular, vertical, and transformable apartment pieces—pet-integrated furniture, wall-mounted workstations, under-bed and over-door storage, and a compact maker bench with fume/noise control—because those will give you the biggest gain in usable square footage while preserving comfort for two adults, three cats, one dog, and an ongoing maker practice in a modest Brooklyn apartment.
The best strategy is not to make isolated gadgets, but to design a small family of multi-function systems that turn dead space into active space. In a Brooklyn apartment, floor area is scarce, so your highest-value builds will use walls, corners, door backs, window zones, and the volume under and above existing furniture. Your skill set is unusually well suited to this because you can combine strong custom structures, precision fittings, electronics, and durable finishes into pieces that would be expensive or impossible to buy off the shelf. Start with transformable human furniture. A wall-mounted fold-down desk or maker table is probably the single most useful build. In closed mode, it can read as a shallow cabinet or shelf; in open mode, it becomes a laptop desk, electronics bench, or light assembly table. Add integrated task lighting, USB-C and AC power, a soldering iron dock, magnetic tool parking, and a small PCB-controlled fan/filter system for occasional low-fume work. If you make it with a welded steel bracket frame and wood or composite work surface, it can be thin, strong, and visually clean. This directly supports your desire to keep making without dedicating a full room to a shop. A second high-value item is a compact rolling maker cart that nests under the fold-down desk, a console table, or a bed. Think of it as a mobile micro-shop: drawers for hand tools, bins for components, a removable anti-static mat, vertical storage for rulers and pliers, and lockable casters. Your CNC and PCB skills make it easy to add charging bays, LED lighting, battery monitoring, and even a quiet ventilation module for spot extraction. In a small apartment, mobility matters because one zone often has to become three different zones over the course of a day. For shared living space, build furniture that hides serious storage. A storage bench for the entry or living room is ideal in New York because it can hold shoes, dog gear, cat supplies, winter accessories, and shopping bags while also serving as seating. You could add a welded steel base with lift-up wood compartments or drawers, plus a durable wipe-clean top cushion. If sized correctly, it can also become the dog’s place near the door without giving up more floor area. A platform bed with integrated drawers is another major square-footage multiplier, especially if your current bed frame wastes the entire under-bed volume. Build a low-profile bed frame with full-extension drawers, side cubbies, cable routing, and perhaps a headboard shelf with reading lights and charging. If ceiling height allows, you can go slightly taller to increase storage dramatically. In a modest apartment, reclaiming that footprint can replace a dresser or reduce the need for bulky storage furniture. For pet life, vertical cat infrastructure is one of the smartest things you can make. Three cats in a small apartment need territory, not just floor toys. Build wall-mounted cat shelves, climbing paths, window perches, and a bridge system above eye level. This gives the cats exercise and private zones without consuming precious floor area. You can also integrate these structures into human furniture—bookcases with hidden cat routes, a media console with cat tunnels, or shelving with a top-level cat runway. Your woodworking and CNC skills are perfect for making these pieces attractive instead of improvised. The litter box problem is worth solving with custom furniture. A ventilated litter enclosure disguised as a bench, sideboard, or console table can save both space and sanity. Include easy-clean liners, charcoal or HEPA-assisted air movement, baffled entrances to reduce tracking, and separate zones if your cats prefer multiple boxes. A small PCB-controlled fan with timer or occupancy-based logic could improve odor control while staying quiet. This is exactly the kind of custom object that apartment living benefits from because retail options are often too small, ugly, or poorly ventilated. For the dog, focus on entry and feeding infrastructure. A slim mudroom-style station near the door—with leash hooks, bag dispenser, towel storage, treat drawer, and a place for harnesses—will reduce clutter immediately. A raised feeding station with sealed storage for food can also be integrated into a bench or kitchen island cart. Since every object needs to earn its place, pet furniture should ideally double as human furniture or storage. Use vertical wall storage aggressively for household items and maker tools. French cleat systems, rail-based hanging organizers, pegboards with enclosed dust covers, and shallow wall cabinets can turn blank walls into dense storage without making the apartment feel cramped. Build shallow cabinets that fit between studs where possible, or above-door shelves in rooms, closets, and hallways. Over-door storage and ceiling-adjacent shelving are especially useful in older apartments with high ceilings. Consider a custom dining/work table that expands only when needed. A narrow console can open into a dining table, project table, or guest workspace. Lightweight metal hardware and CNC-cut indexing parts can make the motion precise and durable. If you host rarely but still want flexibility, this kind of transformable furniture is more efficient than dedicating permanent floor space to a full-size table. Because you want to continue making, your apartment builds should prioritize noise, dust, and odor management. A desktop enclosure for soldering, light electronics, and small CNC tasks in plastics or wood can be very useful if designed for apartment constraints. Think clear panels, gasketed doors, internal LED lighting, vacuum/extraction ports, vibration isolation, and storage for fixtures. Keep it optimized for quiet operations and avoid any process that creates sustained noise or hazardous fumes. A compact filtered spray/finish booth for very small parts may also be worthwhile if you use low-odor finishes and can vent safely, but in many apartments dry assembly and low-emission fabrication will be the realistic path. You should also think in terms of modularity and moving. Brooklyn apartments often change, layouts are awkward, and you may move again. Build components in manageable modules that can be carried through narrow stairs and doors, disassembled, and reconfigured. Standardize dimensions, fasteners, power modules, and panel sizes. For example, make your storage cubes, drawer carcasses, and wall standards interoperable so a pet console today can become a workshop cabinet later. Material choice matters in a small home. Favor lightweight plywood, aluminum, and thin-wall steel where they reduce bulk without sacrificing strength. Avoid overbuilding with heavy hardwoods unless they serve a specific wear or aesthetic purpose. Soft-close hardware, rubber isolation, felt lining, and rounded edges will make your pieces apartment-friendly and pet-safe. Since visual clutter makes small spaces feel smaller, aim for enclosed storage and coordinated finishes so your custom builds feel like architecture rather than shop leftovers. If you want a prioritized build list, the most impactful order is: first, a platform bed with storage; second, a fold-down wall desk/maker station; third, a rolling micro-shop cart; fourth, a cat wall system; fifth, a litter-box console with ventilation; sixth, an entry bench with dog storage; seventh, high-wall and over-door shelving; and eighth, an expandable dining/work table. That sequence addresses the biggest daily pain points first: storage, workspace, pet management, and flexibility. In short, the best items to create are the ones that combine storage, transformation, and vertical use. Your technical range lets you build unusually elegant solutions where furniture, pet infrastructure, and maker capability all coexist. In a modest Brooklyn apartment, that is how you make limited square footage feel intentional rather than restrictive.
Mistral Large
Answer: You should create modular, multi-functional, and vertically integrated furniture and storage solutions tailored to your pets, maker activities, and urban living constraints.
Your transition from a suburban home in the Inland Empire to a modest Brooklyn apartment presents a unique opportunity to leverage your maker skills to address space limitations while accommodating your lifestyle—pets, partner, and passion for making. The key is to design items that maximize vertical space, serve multiple purposes, and can be customized to fit the quirks of urban living. Below are specific, actionable ideas that align with your skills and needs: ### **1. Modular Pet Furniture with Integrated Storage** **Why it works:** With three cats and a medium-sized dog, pet-related clutter (litter boxes, beds, toys, food) can quickly overwhelm a small space. Modular designs allow you to stack or combine units to fit tight corners or walls, freeing up floor space for movement and other activities. **What to build:** - **Wall-mounted cat shelves and climbing structures:** Use CNC-machined wood or lightweight aluminum (for structural integrity) to create a network of shelves, ramps, and perches that double as a cat playground. Incorporate hidden compartments for storing pet toys or small maker tools. The shelves can be designed to attach to studs or use heavy-duty drywall anchors for stability. - **Multi-tiered pet feeding station:** Fabricate a slim, vertical feeding station with pull-out trays for food and water bowls. Include a built-in drawer for storing pet supplies (leashes, treats, brushes) and a small shelf above for a litter box. Use waterproof materials like sealed wood or plastic for easy cleaning. - **Fold-down or slide-out litter box enclosure:** Design a cabinet that houses the litter box and can be tucked into a narrow space (e.g., between a wall and a bookshelf). The front panel could fold down to provide access, or the entire unit could slide out like a drawer. Add a small exhaust fan (using your circuit board skills) to control odors, with a carbon filter for air purification. ### **2. Space-Saving Maker Workstations** **Why it works:** Continuing your maker activities in a small apartment requires a compact, adaptable workspace that can be stowed away when not in use. Your skills in woodworking, CNC machining, and circuit design can create a workspace that is both functional and unobtrusive. **What to build:** - **Fold-down or wall-mounted workbench:** Construct a sturdy workbench that folds flat against the wall when not in use. Use lightweight aluminum or wood for the frame, and incorporate a pegboard or magnetic tool strip on the underside for hanging tools. Add a small, lockable drawer for storing sharp or hazardous tools (e.g., soldering irons, rotary tools) safely away from pets. - **Mobile maker cart:** Build a rolling cart with multiple tiers to hold your tools, materials, and projects. The top surface could double as a workbench, while the lower shelves store bins for organizing small parts (e.g., screws, resistors, circuit boards). Use CNC-machined plastic or wood for the cart’s structure, and add locking casters to prevent it from rolling when in use. Include a power strip with USB ports for charging tools or powering small devices. - **Under-desk or under-shelf tool storage:** If you have a desk or table, design custom brackets or racks to mount underneath it for storing tools, clamps, or materials. Use your welding skills to create lightweight metal frames that can be bolted to the underside of the furniture. ### **3. Vertical Storage Solutions** **Why it works:** In a small apartment, vertical space is often underutilized. Your skills can help you create storage that is both functional and aesthetically pleasing, reducing clutter on the floor and surfaces. **What to build:** - **Floor-to-ceiling shelving units with adjustable shelves:** Use CNC-machined wood or aluminum to create sleek, minimalist shelving that can be customized to fit your space. Include a mix of open shelves for display (e.g., books, plants, maker projects) and closed cabinets for hiding clutter (e.g., pet supplies, tools). Add LED strip lighting (using your circuit design skills) to illuminate the shelves and create ambiance. - **Over-the-door storage:** Fabricate slim, over-the-door racks or pockets for storing small items like pet grooming supplies, craft materials, or tools. Use lightweight materials like plastic or thin wood, and design them to hang over standard interior doors. - **Ceiling-mounted bike or tool rack:** If you own a bike or have long tools (e.g., clamps, rulers), design a ceiling-mounted rack to store them out of the way. Use your welding skills to create a sturdy metal frame, and add pulleys or hooks for easy access. ### **4. Multi-Functional Furniture** **Why it works:** Multi-functional furniture is essential in small spaces, as it allows a single piece to serve multiple purposes (e.g., seating, storage, workspace). Your skills can help you create custom pieces that are tailored to your exact needs. **What to build:** - **Convertible coffee table/workbench:** Design a coffee table with a lift-top mechanism that reveals a work surface for maker projects. The interior can include storage for tools, materials, or pet supplies. Use your woodworking skills to create a sturdy frame, and add soft-close hinges for smooth operation. - **Murphy-style bed with integrated desk or storage:** If your apartment has limited bedroom space, build a Murphy bed that folds up into the wall when not in use. The underside of the bed can double as a desk, shelf, or storage unit. Use lightweight materials to make the bed easy to operate, and add a counterbalance system for safety. - **Bench with hidden storage:** Fabricate a bench for seating that doubles as a storage chest. The top can lift up to reveal space for storing pet beds, blankets, or maker materials. Add cushions for comfort, and use durable, easy-to-clean fabrics for the upholstery. ### **5. Smart Home and Pet Tech** **Why it works:** Your circuit board design and fabrication skills can be used to create custom smart home devices that improve your quality of life in a small space. These can range from practical solutions (e.g., automated pet feeders) to fun projects (e.g., interactive pet toys). **What to build:** - **Automated pet feeder with portion control:** Design a circuit board to control a motorized pet feeder that dispenses precise portions of food at scheduled times. Use a 3D-printed or CNC-machined housing to enclose the electronics, and add a smartphone app (via Bluetooth or Wi-Fi) for remote control. - **Interactive pet toys:** Create motion-activated or sound-activated toys for your cats and dog to keep them entertained when you’re not home. For example, a laser pointer that moves randomly across the floor, or a treat-dispensing puzzle toy that releases treats when solved. - **Smart lighting for maker spaces:** Design a circuit board to control LED lighting in your workspace, with adjustable brightness and color temperature to reduce eye strain. Add motion sensors to turn the lights on/off automatically when you enter or leave the space. ### **6. Custom Closet and Pantry Organizers** **Why it works:** Closets and pantries in small apartments are often poorly designed for efficient storage. Your skills can help you create custom organizers that maximize every inch of space. **What to build:** - **Pull-out pantry shelves:** If your kitchen has a narrow gap between the fridge and the wall, build a pull-out pantry unit with shelves for storing dry goods, pet food, or maker supplies. Use lightweight materials like wood or plastic, and add soft-close slides for smooth operation. - **Modular closet systems:** Design a closet organizer with adjustable shelves, drawers, and hanging rods to accommodate your clothing, shoes, and accessories. Use CNC-machined wood or metal for the frame, and add sliding doors to save space. - **Under-sink storage:** Fabricate a custom organizer for under the sink to store cleaning supplies, pet grooming tools, or maker materials. Use waterproof materials and add pull-out trays for easy access. ### **7. Noise-Reducing Solutions for Maker Activities** **Why it works:** Maker activities (e.g., soldering, CNC machining, woodworking) can be noisy, which may disturb neighbors in an apartment building. Your skills can help you create sound-dampening solutions to minimize noise. **What to build:** - **Soundproof workbench enclosure:** Build a small, enclosed workbench with sound-absorbing materials (e.g., foam, mass-loaded vinyl) to contain noise from tools like a Dremel or soldering iron. Add a clear acrylic or polycarbonate window for visibility, and include ventilation to prevent overheating. - **Portable sound booth for electronics work:** Design a collapsible sound booth for soldering or circuit testing. Use lightweight materials like foam-core panels or acoustic foam, and add a small fan for ventilation. - **Vibration-dampening work surface:** If you plan to do light CNC machining or woodworking, create a work surface with vibration-dampening materials (e.g., rubber pads, sorbothane) to reduce noise and prevent damage to the apartment floor. ### **8. Outdoor Space Optimization (If Applicable)** **Why it works:** If your apartment has a balcony or small outdoor space, you can extend your living area by creating functional outdoor furniture and storage. **What to build:** - **Fold-down balcony table:** Design a table that folds flat against the wall when not in use. Use weather-resistant materials like treated wood or aluminum, and add hooks for hanging plants or tools. - **Vertical planter system:** Create a wall-mounted planter system for growing herbs or small plants. Use CNC-machined wood or plastic for the structure, and add a drip irrigation system (using your circuit skills) for easy maintenance. - **Storage bench for outdoor gear:** Build a bench with hidden storage for pet supplies, tools, or outdoor cushions. Use weather-resistant materials and add a hinged top for easy access. ### **Final Thoughts:** The key to making the most of your limited apartment space is to focus on **modularity, multi-functionality, and vertical integration**. Your maker skills give you a unique advantage in designing and fabricating custom solutions that are tailored to your exact needs—something off-the-shelf products can rarely provide. Start with the items that will have the biggest impact on your daily life (e.g., pet furniture, maker workspace), and gradually expand to other areas as time and space allow. Additionally, consider documenting your builds and sharing them with the maker community. Not only will this provide a creative outlet, but it could also inspire others facing similar space constraints. Your skills are a valuable asset, and with thoughtful design, you can create a Brooklyn apartment that feels spacious, functional, and uniquely yours.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable unanimously recommended abandoning the suburban 'garage mindset' in favor of a vertical, cubic-foot strategy. GPT-5.4 and Claude Sonnet 4.6 proposed high-impact builds like Murphy beds integrated with CNC-machined desks, while Kimi K2.5 and Gemini 3.1 Pro emphasized using PCB skills to create automated fume extraction and smart lighting—essential for making in a dense NYC environment. Grok 4.20 and Mistral Large highlighted that custom welding allows for sleek wall-mounted cat systems that reclaim floor space while managing multi-pet territory dynamics.
All 7 models agreed