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By Ursula Wirtz on November 15 2018 06:07:07
So now you know that a futon bunk bed is two beds, the bottom being a futon. The standard bunk bed has two twin beds -- above and below. And the loft bed has one bed above and an open space below.
With many standard bunk beds, you have the advantage of using the bunk bed as a twin bunk (that is, using both beds) while kids are little and are sharing a room, but later as a loft bed for one child. When kids get older and move to separate rooms, the bunk bed can be converted to a loft bed for one! All you do is remove the base of the lower bunk, turn the back rail toward the wall, re-attach it to the sides, and voila! -- A loft bed!
There is one major flaw in the concept of most bunks. They are simply unsafe. Children either fall or jump from the top bunk causing all manner of injuries. Broken bones and scrapes and bruises can be the least of it.
A bunk bed is carriage of sleep (which is the natural rest cycle of human beings) in which the skeletal frame of one bed is supported by the skeletal frame of another bed situated below with the stated purpose of allowing two individuals to sleep in one location with the additional benefit of extended any and all available flooring space.
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