Chapter 1: The Empty House and “Project Zero”
Elon Musk stood in the center of the living room of his new home in Austin, Texas. It wasn’t a lavish mansion with marble pillars; it was a minimalist structure of glass and recycled steel tucked away near the Colorado River. There were no assistants, no world-class interior designers holding velvet swatches.
There was only Elon and a vast, empty space.
“Why would I hire someone for this?” Elon mused, rubbing his chin. “They’ll just bring in obsolete 20th-century relics—bulky leather sofas and mahogany dust-collectors. A house is an operating system. And this OS needs to be redesigned from the ground up.”
He pulled out his satellite phone, swiped away 47 notifications about a Starship launch, and opened a blank note. He titled the mission: “Project Sanctuary.” The goal: Furnish the entire home within 24 hours. The only condition: Every item must have maximum efficiency or be revolutionary.
And so, the world’s richest man decided to drive his Cybertruck to the local home goods stores himself.
Chapter 2: Deployment at the Furniture Mart

When the stainless-steel Cybertruck pulled up to a large furniture center, the crowd began to murmur. Elon didn’t notice. He walked in wearing a black t-shirt and SpaceX boots still dusted with soil from the launchpad.
The store manager nearly fainted upon recognizing the guest. “Mr. Musk! We can bring our luxury catalogs to your office immediately…”
“Not necessary,” Elon interrupted, his eyes scanning the rows of sofas. “I need a seating structure with optimal foam density to reduce spinal pressure while I contemplate quantum mechanics. Do you have anything using load-bearing materials equivalent to astronaut seating?”
The manager pointed tremblingly to a gray fabric armchair. Elon approached it, but he didn’t sit down normally. He pulled a laser measurer from his pocket and calculated the backrest angle.
“112 degrees? Pathetic,” Elon muttered. “If I sit here for four hours, lower limb circulation will drop by 15%. Do you have anything in carbon fiber?”
After 30 minutes, Elon decided to buy the simplest oak dining table, but on one condition: he demanded the staff take it apart. “I’ll reassemble it myself with titanium bolts. Oak is a great carbon sink, but your structural joints are too flimsy.”
Chapter 3: The Appliance Matrix and Hexagonal Philosophy
The hardest part wasn’t the bed (which Elon declared should be a high-tech mattress placed directly on the floor to optimize sleep-to-work transition time), but the kitchen.
Elon stood before the rows of porcelain plates. To him, this was a geometry problem. “Why are plates round?” he asked a shivering salesperson. “Um… because it’s tradition, sir?” “Wrong. Circles are a waste of space when loading a dishwasher. If they were hexagonal, we could optimize surface area utilization by up to 25%. Hexagons are nature’s most perfect shape.”
He refused the $5,000 fine china and instead chose military-grade heat-resistant polymer plates. “They’re light, unbreakable, and have a low friction coefficient. I can eat faster and get back to work.”
Next were the lights. Elon spent two hours debating with himself over the light spectrum. He wanted bulbs that could accurately simulate the solar cycle on Mars. “I need my brain to acclimate to the light of the new frontier,” he explained to the sweating manager.
Ultimately, he bought every smart LED bulb in the store, intending to go home and rewrite the code for the house’s lighting system.
Chapter 4: Assembly Night in Austin
That evening, Elon’s new home looked more like a construction site than a residence. Oak planks, titanium screws, and high-tech mattresses were scattered everywhere.
Elon turned on some ambient techno music, grabbed a cordless drill, and began his “ritual.” To him, assembling a table was no different from assembling a Raptor rocket engine. He meticulously measured the torque of every screw. He stripped away decorative flourishes, calling them “unnecessary visual computational costs.”
At 2:00 a.m., he was crawling on the floor, attaching silicone pads to chair legs. “Static friction must be near zero,” he whispered, his eyes bloodshot.
Suddenly, he stopped. He looked at the sofa he had hand-upholstered with specialized fire-retardant material. It looked… bizarre. It wouldn’t fit in any architectural magazine. It looked like a piece of an abandoned space station.
Elon sat down on the sofa. For the first time that day, he was silent.
Chapter 5: The Feeling of “Home”
In the quiet of the Texas night, Elon looked out the floor-to-ceiling windows. The stars twinkled above. He realized that no matter how much he optimized this house—regardless of Mars-simulated bulbs or hexagonal plates—what truly makes a home isn’t the furniture.
He remembered nights sleeping on the Tesla factory floor in Fremont to hit Model 3 targets. He remembered the cramped offices of X.com.
This house, with items he had hand-selected and assembled, was stark and rigid, but it bore his unmistakable signature: a relentless effort to control reality.
He picked up a polymer plate, ate an energy bar, and looked at the oak table reinforced with titanium. It was sturdy enough to withstand a major earthquake or a minor explosion.
“All right,” Elon smiled slightly. “The operating system is stable.”
He lay down on the mattress on the floor, requiring no velvet blankets or down pillows. With only a laptop beside him and the LED lights fading into the dusty red of a Martian sunset, he muttered before falling into a 6-hour power nap: “Tomorrow, I have to redesign that showerhead. The current flow rate is completely illogical…”
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