When beds were first put on risers, floors were made of dirt.
So what? When I went a couple weeks without a bed frame in college, I just put the box springs on the floor and the mattress on that. Box springs don’t have anything to do with a frame.
Many ground floors in houses in America have wooden joists, not concrete. Almost all upper floors are made with wooden joists. Maybe it’s a little different in some cheap apartment buildings, but I can’t imagine they’re all just a thin layer of carpet over concrete.
Neat! Thanks for that word.
The higher the bed, the closer you are to heaven when the time comes.
I suspect he was thinking of this type of frame, which is used with just a mattress and no box spring.
Isn’t the first thing that actually made putting a mattress on something other than the floor worth the trouble the original “box-spring” a wooden frame strung with rope? Which doesn’t do anything if it isn’t elevated. Supposedly this is what the sleep tight in “sleep tight, don’t let the bedbugs bite” is referring to.
CMC fnord!
Storage space underneath is a factor in crowded environments.
I have seen very, very few beds that high off the ground.
I once read a historical novel set in Louisiana in the 1700’s, on an indigo plantation. Indigo attracts ants, bugs. Every foot of every bed in the plantation mansion was set into a metal container filled with water, to keep the ants from swarming up onto the bed and so over the sleeper.
Also, it makes it easier on the ankle grabbing monster-under-the-bed.
If they had habitually done it their whole life it probably wouldn’t be.
It makes it quite a bit easier for doctors to examine and treat people if they are elevated.
This response made me laugh out loud. You have a marvelous grasp of the obvious. [/Cheers quote]
Um, just how does that work?? If the springs aren’t hanging with room underneath to expand/ move, then they’re not doing what they are meant to do.
I also used box springs in the generic sense, because there are many kinds of suspense system. The cheaper ones are thin wooden boards in a frame suspended; some systems are integrated into the mattress, some come with motors to adjust the bed individually etc.
None of these work if there is no space beneath them because they sit directly on the floor, and most won’t work if not supported by a frame.
Oh I’m sorry. I thought we were talking generally about the First World and not excuslivly about the US.
even if you secure the legs, elevated beds don’t stop bedbugs. they climb up the wall and swan dive towards your delicious flesh.
Also, raised beds originated from the Middle East, where wooden floors are very rare.
It might warp the floorboards as well. Back in the day, I had a landlord who made a point of forbidding us to lay a mattress directly on the floor for this reason.
[quote=“Gary “Wombat” Robson, post:27, topic:613632”]
Storage space underneath is a factor in crowded environments.
I have seen very, very few beds that high off the ground.
[/QUOTE]
Recently went sightseeing to the Mughal emperor Akbar’s palace. His bed was a platform a good 7-8 feet off the ground, and apparently could be reached only by a retractable cloth ladder. I’m guessing it was that way to prevent or slow down assassination attempts
I think it makes it warmer. N=1
Back in the day when [del]your mom[/del] people actually made the beds every day, an elevated bed is less likely to cause back ache.
Those of us who do not have carpeting disagree with your last sentence.