Minimalist Home - Intentional Design for Every Home https://minimalisthome.net/ Intentional Design for Every Home Fri, 13 Mar 2026 13:49:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0.1 15 Summer Bedroom Ideas to Keep Your Sleep Space Cool, Airy, and Beautifully Minimal – 2026 https://minimalisthome.net/15-summer-bedroom-ideas-to-keep-your-sleep-space-cool/ Tue, 24 Mar 2026 09:00:00 +0000 https://minimalisthome.net/?p=1431 By Elena Marsh · Updated March 2026 OK so I moved into my current apartment in July — peak summer, zero AC, top floor — and within three days I was sleeping on the bathroom tiles at 2am. Not my finest moment. What saved me wasn’t a fan (I had three already). It was actually ... Read more

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By Elena Marsh · Updated March 2026

OK so I moved into my current apartment in July — peak summer, zero AC, top floor — and within three days I was sleeping on the bathroom tiles at 2am. Not my finest moment. What saved me wasn’t a fan (I had three already). It was actually rethinking the whole bedroom: the frame, the fabrics, the curtains, the tiny decisions I’d been ignoring for years. Turns out a bedroom that looks cool actually feels cooler. There’s some actual science behind it, but mostly it’s just that waking up to a calm, airy room tricks your nervous system into not melting. Anyway — here are 15 summer bedroom ideas that genuinely work, and yes, they all look incredible on a phone screen at 11pm while you’re doom-scrolling for inspiration.


The Bed Frame: Where Your Whole Summer Starts

This is the foundation. Everything else — the bedding, the lamps, the vibes — flows from the frame you choose. For summer, lower and lighter wins every time.

1. The Classic White-Oak Platform Bed

Not gonna lie, this is the image I have saved in approximately four different Pinterest boards. A white-oak platform bed with crisp white linen is basically the platonic ideal of a summer bedroom — it reads clean, it reads cool, and it photographs like a dream in morning light. The low profile is key. High bed frames trap heat around you. Low platforms let air circulate, and they make a room feel bigger, which psychologically reads as airier even on the hottest nights. If you’re in the market, white oak platform bed frames have gotten surprisingly affordable in the last couple of years. Pair it with nothing fussy — just good linen and a little morning sun.

For more platform bed inspo, our deep-dive into low-profile platform bed ideas has some seriously good options at every price point.

2. Low Teak Platform With a Rattan Moment Overhead

OK but hear me out — teak + sage + rattan pendant is a combination that shouldn’t work as well as it does. It’s giving “breezy Indonesian villa” without requiring a flight to Bali. The sage cotton layers keep it grounded and cool-toned, and the rattan pendant does something really interesting to the light: it scatters it in this warm, dappled way that makes the whole room feel softer. I added a rattan pendant to my own bedroom last August and I’m still not over it. Rattan pendant lamps are a no-brainer for summer bedrooms — they add warmth without adding heat, and they work in rentals (just swap the existing fixture, save the original, reinstall when you move out).

3. Japandi Oak With a Slate Tray and Zero Clutter

This one’s a sleeper hit. (Pun fully intended.) The beige linen + low oak + a single slate tray on the nightstand is doing so much work visually. It’s the Japandi approach — Japanese restraint meets Scandinavian warmth — and it feels impossibly serene on a hot summer night. The trick is the slate tray. It corrals your nightstand items (water glass, book, phone) into one intentional cluster so nothing looks chaotic. Architectural Digest has covered the Japandi trend extensively, and honestly they’re right that it’s not going anywhere — because it actually solves real problems, like visual noise and clutter, which makes sleep harder in summer when your brain is already overstimulated.

4. The Sleek White Lacquered Bed With Concrete Accents

For the truly minimalist among us. White lacquer + concrete lamp + nothing else. Audacious, honestly. The high-gloss finish on the frame reflects light around the room instead of absorbing it, which makes the space feel brighter and more open — especially useful if your bedroom doesn’t get great natural light in summer. This setup requires commitment because clutter will absolutely ruin it. But if you can pull it off? Unreal. The concrete floor lamp is doing the heavy lifting here — it’s industrial but soft, which is a combo that shouldn’t work but absolutely does in a white room.


Upholstered Headboards — the Cooler Way to Do Cozy

Here’s something I didn’t expect to love: linen-upholstered headboards in summer. You’d think fabric headboard = warm, right? Wrong. The right linen in the right neutral reads incredibly cool and clean, especially in the morning light.

5. Cream Linen Headboard With Walnut Nightstand

The cream linen against warm walnut wood is one of those combinations that should be basic but somehow always looks considered. This is a room that never needs much — one lamp, one plant, one small object on the nightstand, and you’re done. The linen upholstery stays cool to the touch, which matters more than people realize. (Nothing worse than pressing your face against a hot velvet headboard at 3am in July. Ask me how I know.) This setup also works beautifully if you’re trying to build a bedroom that looks serene year-round — our guide to transitional master bedrooms with neutral palettes has a lot of similar energy if you want to expand the look.

6. Sage Linen Upholstered Bed, Scandinavian Edition

Sage. Is. Everything. I will die on this hill. The sage linen upholstered bed against that birch nightstand is giving Scandinavian coastal vibes, and the lightness of the birch keeps the whole setup from feeling heavy. Scandinavian design is obsessed with light and air — Apartment Therapy has a great breakdown of why Nordic interiors work so well for sleep — and sage specifically reads as cool-toned even when your brain knows it’s technically a warm green. It’s a trick the color is playing on you and I’m here for it. Works especially well with white walls and bare wood floors.


Canopy Beds and Iron Frames — Airy by Design

Don’t sleep on canopy beds for summer (or do — that’s literally the point). The open frame creates visual height and airiness without adding any actual warmth. And iron frames? They radiate nothing.

7. White Iron Frame With Sage Linen: The Coastal Classic

Why is nobody talking about this combo enough? White iron + sage linen is the coastal bedroom formula that never gets old. The iron frame feels inherently summery — it’s the kind of bed you’d find in a beach house, which means your brain has already associated it with cool ocean air. Add sage linen and you’re basically done. No need for a headboard, no need for decorative pillows. Just a good duvet and a window cracked open.

Works in rentals, by the way. Iron bed frames are easy to assemble, easy to move, and they make a rented room feel like an intentional choice rather than an afterthought.

8. The Linen Canopy With Sheer Panels

This is the bedroom that lives in my head rent-free. A linen canopy frame with loose sheer panels that billow slightly when there’s any breeze at all — it’s genuinely one of the most romantic and functional summer bedroom ideas I’ve come across. The sheer panels diffuse light without blocking it, which means early morning sun doesn’t hit you like a spotlight but you still wake up feeling like you’re in a magazine. The walnut nightstand in warm backlight adds just enough richness to keep it from feeling too clinical. I’ve been obsessing over canopy setups ever since House Beautiful ran a whole feature on bedroom retreats and now I can’t unsee them everywhere.

9. White Iron Canopy With Seafoam Cotton

Seafoam. Actual seafoam cotton on a white iron canopy frame. In a sunlit room. This is the color equivalent of jumping into a cold lake on a July afternoon. The cool blue-green of seafoam works especially hard in summer because it reads as literally cold — there’s color psychology research behind this, and also just… look at it. If you can only make one color change to your summer bedroom, swap your bedding to a cool blue-green and watch how different the room feels. Seafoam cotton duvet covers are everywhere right now and the price points are excellent.


Bedding Is the Whole Conversation, Let’s Be Honest

You can have the most beautiful bed frame in the world and ruin it with the wrong bedding. In summer, the goal is simple: natural fibers, breathable weaves, and nothing you’d describe as “plush.”

10. The Flat-Lay That Converts Everyone

I literally rearranged my entire linen closet after staring at this image for too long. The overhead flat-lay of white cotton and linen bedding — slightly rumpled, natural and unforced — is the aesthetic most of us are chasing and almost nobody pulls off in real life. The secret is layering. A cotton fitted sheet, then a linen flat sheet used loosely, then a lightweight quilt folded at the foot. You get visual depth and texture without any actual weight or warmth. White linen-cotton blend bedding is also significantly cooler to sleep in than microfiber, which I cannot stress enough — microfiber in summer is a sleep crime.

11. The Boho Holdout: Cream Velvet With Macramé and an Olive Tree

OK, hear me out — not everyone wants pure Scandi minimalism in summer, and that’s valid. The cream velvet bed with a macramé throw and a potted olive tree in the corner is the bohemian option that still keeps its cool (literally). Cream velvet reads warmer than linen but lighter than dark colors, and the olive tree does something to a room — it’s soft, sculptural, and slightly Mediterranean in a way that makes you feel like you’re somewhere breezy even when you’re not. The macramé throw draped casually over the end of the bed is functional too: light enough for summer nights, textural enough to look intentional. Macramé cotton throws usually come in at under $40 and they punch way above their price point visually.


Windows: Your Free Air Conditioning (If You Do Them Right)

The window treatment in a summer bedroom does more work than any piece of furniture. Get this right and everything else in the room feels easier. Get it wrong — heavy drapes, blackout curtains that trap heat, synthetic fabric that smells weird in the sun — and no amount of sage linen bedding will save you.

12. The Sheer Linen Curtain Catching a Breeze

This image. A sheer cream linen curtain barely moving in a morning breeze beside a sunlit window. It’s possibly the most evocative summer bedroom image that exists, and the good news is it’s completely achievable. Sheer linen diffuses direct sunlight — so your room stays bright without becoming a greenhouse — and it allows air movement, which is the whole game in summer. Hang them high (close to the ceiling) and wide (beyond the window frame) so they pool slightly on the floor. Sheer linen curtain panels are renters-friendly too — just use good tension rods or over-door hooks if you can’t drill.

Works in rentals? Yes. No drilling required if you use a ceiling-mount tension rod system.

13. Sage Linen Curtain With a Ceramic Succulent on the Sill

The sage curtain + ceramic succulent on the sill is so simple it almost feels too easy. But that’s the thing about good minimalist styling — the restraint is the whole point. The sage reads cool and botanical, the ceramic pot adds a tactile organic note, and the soft morning light does everything else. You don’t need anything else on that windowsill. One object, placed with intention. Done.

This is also one of those details that photographs beautifully for a reason: it has a clear focal point, a color story (sage, cream, natural light), and negative space that lets the eye rest. Your guests will notice it. Your Instagram will thank you.


The Nightstand Corner — Don’t Underestimate It

Here’s the truth nobody says: your nightstand is the last thing you see before you fall asleep and the first thing you see when you wake up. It is doing a lot of emotional heavy lifting, and most of us are treating it like a dumping ground. Summer is the perfect excuse to fix that.

14. Mid-Century Walnut Nightstand With a Seafoam Ceramic Lamp

Mid-century walnut nightstand. Seafoam ceramic lamp. Afternoon light. This combination is almost unfairly good. The walnut brings warmth and grain, the seafoam lamp brings the cool-toned color pop, and the rounded ceramic base has a handmade quality that keeps it from feeling too slick. (I have a version of this on my own nightstand — mine’s a thrifted walnut piece with a sage green lamp I found at a local ceramics market — and honestly it’s my favorite part of the whole room.)

The afternoon light in this image is important to note: it’s golden but not harsh, which means the curtains are doing their job filtering direct sun. Keep that in mind when styling your own nightstand — the lamp should be a secondary light source that creates warmth in the evenings, not a primary source fighting against harsh daylight.

15. White Rattan Nightstand With a Sage Ceramic Carafe

This is the one. The white rattan nightstand with a sage ceramic carafe in soft coastal morning light — it’s everything a summer nightstand should be. Rattan is inherently a warm-weather material. It reads breezy, it’s lightweight, and it has that airy quality that makes a room feel less dense. The sage ceramic carafe is a stroke of genius: it doubles as a functional water vessel (staying hydrated at night matters, especially in summer) and a sculptural object that holds the sage color story running through the room.

White rattan nightstands are genuinely one of the best summer bedroom investments under $150. They’re light enough to move easily, they don’t show dust the way solid-finish pieces do, and they work in coastal, Scandinavian, and minimalist aesthetics equally well. Maximum flexibility, minimum effort.

Also — if your nightstand situation is currently “stack of books and a glass of water balanced on top of each other” — I’m not judging you. I’ve been there. But this is the year we fix it. (For more ideas on keeping your whole bedroom organized and intentional, our bedroom organization guide is genuinely one of my favorites we’ve published.)


So, What’s the Actual Takeaway?

Reading back through all of this, a few themes are obvious: low frames, natural fibers, cool-toned colors (sage, seafoam, cream), and the discipline to keep surfaces clear. None of this is complicated. Most of it is just about subtraction — taking things out of a room rather than adding more.

The color palette doing the most work this summer is sage + white + warm wood tones, with seafoam as an accent when you want something with more presence. It shows up in almost every idea here for a reason: it’s cooling without being cold, it’s natural without being boring, and it photographs well in both morning and afternoon light. Which — yes — matters if you’re the kind of person who occasionally photographs your own home. No judgment.

A few practical reminders before you start shopping:

  • Linen and cotton always over polyester or microfiber for summer sleep. Always.
  • Low bed frames really do help with air circulation — try sleeping closer to the floor before you invest in a thick box spring.
  • Sheer curtains over blackout curtains in summer, even if you like to sleep in. The light is softer and the room temperature stays lower.
  • One good ceramic or rattan object on your nightstand beats three bad plastic ones every time.
  • Rentals can absolutely pull off every single idea on this list. Most of these changes are completely reversible.

And honestly? The best summer bedroom is one that makes you want to spend time in it — not just sleep, but read, rest, breathe. If you’re building that kind of room from the ground up, our Scandinavian bedroom guide approaches the same goals from a slightly different angle and is absolutely worth a read alongside this one.

Now go strip your bed, open the windows, and order yourself some linen. You deserve a cool summer sleep.

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15 Platform Bed Bedroom Ideas for a Low-Profile, Grounded, and Contemporary Sleep Space – 2026 https://minimalisthome.net/15-platform-bed-bedroom-ideas-for-a-low-profile-grounded-and-contemporary-sleep-space-2026/ Fri, 13 Mar 2026 06:20:33 +0000 https://minimalisthome.net/15-platform-bed-bedroom-ideas-for-a-low-profile-grounded-and-contemporary-sleep-space-2026/ 15 Platform Bed Bedroom Ideas for a Low-Profile, Grounded, and Contemporary Sleep Space (2026) By Elena Marsh · Updated March 2026 There is something almost meditative about a platform bed. Lower to the ground, visually anchored, it does this quiet architectural trick where the whole room seems to exhale — the ceiling rises, the walls ... Read more

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15 Platform Bed Bedroom Ideas for a Low-Profile, Grounded, and Contemporary Sleep Space (2026)

There is something almost meditative about a platform bed. Lower to the ground, visually anchored, it does this quiet architectural trick where the whole room seems to exhale — the ceiling rises, the walls breathe, and your eye lands somewhere calm and deliberate. It’s not just furniture. It’s a decision about how you want a room to feel. And in 2026, the platform bed is having a serious moment — raw woods, matte finishes, layered textiles, that gorgeous tension between weightlessness and substance. Whether you’re starting from scratch or rethinking a bedroom that’s never quite clicked, these 15 ideas span everything from moody Japandi minimalism to sun-warmed bohemian richness. Run your hand across these concepts. I think you’ll feel something.

1. Walnut and Charcoal in a Scandinavian Morning Light

Walnut in diffused morning light is a dopamine hit. That dark, honey-threaded grain against charcoal linen — there’s so much going on texturally, and yet it reads as completely restrained. The low profile of the platform frame means all that warm wood tones the visual floor of the room, grounding everything without heaviness. Layer a chunky knit throw in off-white across the foot of the bed and you have that matte-against-grain tension that makes a room feel genuinely considered.

Shop walnut platform bed frames on Amazon

2. White Oak Headboard with a Ceramic Soul

Pale white oak bleached to the color of bone, with a headboard that incorporates ceramic detail — a small rectangular inset, a strip of matte glaze the shade of fresh cream. In soft daylight, the whole thing reads like a still life from a Nordic design magazine. This palette, that barely-there warmth of #E8E0D5, belongs in a bedroom where the morning ritual is slow and intentional. As Elle Decor has been championing for the past two seasons, the whitened wood aesthetic isn’t cold — it’s clarifying.

3. Can Bouclé Actually Work on a Bed Frame?

Yes. Absolutely, unequivocally yes. A camel bouclé platform bed is like sleeping adjacent to a warm embrace — that nubby, looped texture catching afternoon light in a hundred tiny shadows, the color landing somewhere between a café au lait and a weathered saddle. Pair it with terracotta linen and you’ve created a palette that feels like late September, all amber warmth and earthy depth. It’s all in the layering: linen on bouclé, rough on plush, the cool smoothness of a ceramic bedside lamp against all that tactile richness.

Shop bouclé upholstered platform beds

A quick note on the natural wood moment: Ideas 4, 9, and 12 below all lean into the warmth of natural wood grains — teak, pine, walnut. If your room gets strong afternoon sun, these are your people. The gold light hits those surfaces and the whole room shifts register, from bedroom to something that feels almost sacred.

4. Mid-Century Teak, Sand, and Golden Hour Magic

Close your eyes and picture this palette in late-afternoon light. Teak — that warm reddish-brown with its ribbon-like grain — cut into the clean geometric lines of a mid-century platform frame, low and wide. Sand cotton bedding, the color of a beach an hour before sunset. The golden hour hits this scene and every surface glows. Add a single pendant lamp in smoked glass and you’ve got a room that earns its keep at every hour of the day.

Shop mid-century teak platform beds

5. White Coastal with a Rattan Backdrop That Actually Works

The rattan wall panel behind the bed is doing the work here — giving the all-white, ivory-linen palette something to push against, a woven warmth that keeps the whole composition from floating away into sterility. The platform bed in white lacquer sits low and clean, a kind of sculptural zero-point from which the room unfolds. Ivory linen, the weight of a real linen duvet, that soft drape over the edge of the frame — you can almost feel how cool it would be against your skin on a warm morning.

Shop white coastal platform beds

6. Smoked Ash and Espresso: The Japandi Darkroom

This is the darkest, most dramatic entry in the collection — and I mean that as a compliment. Smoked ash wood carries this almost-grey, almost-brown quality that resists easy categorization. Pair it with an espresso wool blanket and the room enters a whole other register: contemplative, cave-like in the best possible sense, somewhere between a Japanese inn and a Scandinavian cabin. Diffused light — a frosted pendant, a paper lamp — is the only right answer here. Bright overhead lights would destroy the magic entirely. Architectural Digest has documented Japandi’s staying power, and rooms like this are exactly why — it doesn’t chase trends, it sits quietly and outlasts them.

Shop Japandi-style platform beds

7. Black Iron Never Looked So Restful

Matte black iron against white walls. That’s it. That’s the whole thesis. The platform frame keeps the iron’s industrial weight from dominating — it’s low, it’s horizontal, it spreads across the floor rather than looming. Charcoal bedding continues the monochromatic thread without turning the whole room into a cave. What makes this work is the white room doing the breathing for you: every surface around the bed is light, clean, generous with space. The iron just anchors it all.

Shop black iron platform bed frames


(I’ll be honest — idea 7 is the one that surprised me most while putting this together. I expected to write two sentences and move on. Instead I kept coming back to it. Something about that stark contrast hits differently when you see a platform form in iron rather than wood. There’s a rawness to it.)


8. The Bedside Edit: Pale Birch and a Ceramic Mug

Sometimes the most important square foot in the bedroom is the nightstand. A pale birch surface, almost the color of unsalted butter, with one handmade ceramic mug sitting on it — the glaze slightly uneven, the handle thick and satisfying. This is the kind of detail that tells a visitor everything about how you’ve chosen to live. The platform bed beside it needs to be low enough that the nightstand surface sits at exactly the right height: reachable without reaching, present without intruding. Get this relationship right and the whole bedroom clicks into place.

9. Natural Pine Meets Rust: A Scandinavian Golden Hour

Pine in golden hour light is a color you can’t mix on a palette — it’s that living orange-gold that only happens when wood and late sun find each other. Rust linen bedding doubles down on the warmth without going full terracotta (a braver pairing than it sounds). This is a Scandinavian sensibility filtered through something warmer, more southern European in its appetite for color. Add an undyed sheepskin on the floor beside the bed and run your hand across the pine frame’s grain — slightly knotty, imperfectly beautiful.

Shop Scandinavian pine platform beds

10. Bohemian Caramel, Jute, and the Art of Not Overthinking It

This one’s for the maximalists who want a low bed but don’t want to give up their love of layering. Caramel cotton — that deep, spiced warmth — on a wide platform frame, with a jute rug beneath spreading the earthy palette across the floor. Stack three or four different cushion textures. Let the bed be slightly unmade. The beauty of the platform form here is structural: no matter how many layers you pile on, the low frame keeps the room from feeling chaotic. The architecture grounds the abundance.

11. White Lacquer, Linen Shade, Coastal Restraint

A white lacquer platform bed is a different proposition from a white-painted wood one. The lacquer has that cool, glassy finish — light slides across it rather than being absorbed. Against a linen Roman shade diffusing even coastal daylight, the whole room becomes about the quality of light itself. This is a room for slow Sunday mornings and paperback novels. As Apartment Therapy regularly advocates, the key to making an all-white bedroom feel alive is layering in natural textile weights — linen is doing the heavy lifting here, keeping the space from going cold.

Shop white lacquer platform beds

12. Walnut with Hairpin Legs: The Unexpected Hybrid

Hairpin legs on a platform bed. It shouldn’t work — the hairpin detail implies a lighter, more lifted aesthetic — but in walnut, with that dark grain and weight, it does something remarkable: it makes the platform feel sculptural rather than just low. The warm lamp light picks up the leather cover of a journal on the nightstand. Small details, but they’re the ones that turn a bedroom into a room you actually want to return to.

Shop walnut hairpin platform beds

13. Charcoal Concrete Japandi with Dried Pampas: Yes, This Is a Mood

The concrete finish on this platform bed isn’t cold — it’s just cool. There’s a difference. The matte grey surface in that charcoal register has a mineral quality, like a river stone smoothed over decades. Dried pampas grass in a tall, unglazed ceramic vase beside it introduces the one organic note the room needs. Morning light hits the concrete effect and picks up faint undertones of warm grey, almost violet in certain directions. This is a room that rewards slow looking.

What makes the Japandi approach work at its best is exactly this: the commitment to a single material idea, pushed until it becomes a full environment, not just a room with some furniture in it.

14. Bleached Oak, Cream, and the Stone Wool Throw That Changes Everything

There is something about a heavy wool throw, the color of a January sky, draped across the foot of a bleached oak bed. The weight of it. The slight roughness of the weave against that smooth, pale wood. This is the pairing that turns a bedroom into something close to the cottagecore Scandinavian crossover dream — but grounded by the platform form, which keeps it from going too soft.

Cream linen, stone grey wool, bleached pale wood. Three tones, three textures. It’s all in the layering.

Shop bleached oak platform bed frames

15. Caramel Linen and Mahogany in the Golden Backlight

We end on warmth. Deep, saturated, unashamed warmth. Caramel linen bedding — the kind of linen that has texture you can see from across the room — against a mahogany nightstand that glows almost amber in golden backlight. This is the richest palette in the collection, the furthest from the cool restraint of ideas 6 and 13. And it earns it. The platform bed keeps everything grounded even as the colors push toward indulgence. Matte linen against gloss-finished mahogany. Rough against smooth. That tension is everything.

Shop caramel linen platform beds


What These 15 Ideas Are Really Telling You

Across all 15 ideas, a few threads run through everything. First: warmth wins. Even the darkest entries — the black iron, the concrete Japandi, the smoked ash — carry warm undertones in their textiles or lighting. The cold minimalist bedroom is out. Warmth, weight, and material presence are in.

Second: the platform form is the great equalizer. It works with bouclé and with iron, with pine and with lacquer, with bohemian layering and with Japandi restraint. The low profile doesn’t dictate a style — it provides a foundation for every style to stand on.

Third, and most importantly: texture is the real design element. Color matters, but it’s the interplay of matte and gloss, rough and smooth, heavy and light, that makes these rooms feel genuinely alive. As House Beautiful has long argued, a bedroom without textural contrast is just a colored box. It’s the layering — always the layering — that does the real work.

The palette story of 2026? Warm neutrals anchored by one brave dark tone. Cream, ivory, and bone punctuated by charcoal, espresso, or smoked ash. Natural wood in every variation from bleached birch to rich mahogany. And throughout, the earthy register of terracotta, rust, and caramel keeping everything honest, grounded, and genuinely beautiful to live with.

Now — which one are you building?

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