Ikea can be exhausting ... China has the solution
Family affair: Adults and kids make use of a display bed in Beijing. Photo: Gilles Sabrie, The New York Times

Ikea can be exhausting ... China has the solution

Dan Levin

When browsing coffee tables, kitchen cabinets and dessert plates becomes too exhausting at an Ikea store in China, feel free to pass out under a deliciously cozy Flong duvet or across a Stora loft bed … right in the showroom.

You will be in good company.

At Ikea’s 21 stores across China, customers – and those simply looking for some climate-controlled shut-eye – have no qualms about getting comfortable on the display furniture. The madding crowd or a stranger already slumbering in the same bed is, the Chinese will tell you, no obstacle to a good nap.

A man naps on a display couch while customers shop at an Ikea store in Beijing. A man naps on a display couch while customers shop at an Ikea store in Beijing, July 25, 2016. At Ikea’s 21 stores in China, shoppers (and those simply looking for climate-controlled shut-eye) have no qualms about getting comfortable on the display furniture. (Gilles Sabrie/The New York Times) A man naps on a display couch while customers shop at an Ikea store in Beijing, July 25, 2016. At Ikea’s 21 stores in China, shoppers (and those simply looking for climate-controlled shut-eye) have no qualms about getting comfortable on the display furniture. (Gilles Sabrie/The New York Times)Customers shopping nearby doesn’t get in the way of racking up a few Zs at an Ikea store in Beijing. Photo: Gilles Sabrie, The New York Times

The Chinese ability to sleep wherever, whenever, is something of a national pastime.

Citizens can be found dozing off, sometimes in bizarre contortions, in supermarkets, on playground equipment, on the backs of mopeds, under parked vehicles and on Ikea display beds.

But why limit oneself to beds when so many couches and chairs are beckoning?

A man takes a nap on a display couch at an Ikea store in Beijing, July 23. A man takes a nap on a display couch at an Ikea store in Beijing, July 23, 2016. At Ikea’s 21 stores in China, shoppers (and those simply looking for climate-controlled shut-eye) have no qualms about getting comfortable on the display furniture. (Gilles Sabrie/The New York Times) A man takes a nap on a display couch at an Ikea store in Beijing, July 23, 2016. At Ikea’s 21 stores in China, shoppers (and those simply looking for climate-controlled shut-eye) have no qualms about getting comfortable on the display furniture. (Gilles Sabrie/The New York Times) - A couple manage a rest while keeping feet off the merchandise although removing shoes is considered “impolite behaviour”. Photo: Gilles Sabrie, The New York Times

While snoozing is prohibited at Ikea stores elsewhere, the Swedish retailer has long permitted Chinese customers to doze off, rather than alienate shoppers accustomed to sleeping in public.

Last year, the Chinese state news media reported that the company was planning to crack down on “impolite behaviour” by waking nappers who had removed their shoes or snuggled under the covers.

But those rules were never enforced, perhaps because Ikea believes that a nation of one billion consumers who sleep in its shops will someday decide to take that furniture home.