I'm trying to think of a way to succinctly describe the possible conflict of a "small quarters" ship. I like the aesthetics of it, personally. I think it says something of the location and the mindset of the people who would take this voyage. It is a willing hardship and denial. It's rather Spartan.
Then we get into "We're in a post scarcity society!" which wasn't really a consideration in TOS. "We can have it all! AND we're NOT the military!" That by itself could see some changes being desired by some.
But then you have the changing mission parameters of TNG (whether the show ever really realized those parameters). This is not just an 18th century sailing vessel writ grand. This is a COLONY. We have families and we're going beyond the rim of starlight for a LOOOONG time. We NEED to have rooms and spaces to express our community and to live our lives. It's not a stargoing aircraft carrier anymore it's a city in space.
This aesthetic becomes baked into the Star Trek DNA and as we move backwards (I do NOT mean that pejoratively) into the spaces where TOS lived in there starts to be a pushback against this Spartan outlook where even having to take into account the economy of space on such a vessel warrants reconsideration in certain sectors of both production and fandom.
That's my take on it.
I remember an interview with Shatner shortly before TMP premiered where he talked about how spacious his new quarters were compared to TOS. Funny to see how small even those are compared to Picard's and certainly to Pike's.
Then we get into "We're in a post scarcity society!" which wasn't really a consideration in TOS. "We can have it all! AND we're NOT the military!" That by itself could see some changes being desired by some.
But then you have the changing mission parameters of TNG (whether the show ever really realized those parameters). This is not just an 18th century sailing vessel writ grand. This is a COLONY. We have families and we're going beyond the rim of starlight for a LOOOONG time. We NEED to have rooms and spaces to express our community and to live our lives. It's not a stargoing aircraft carrier anymore it's a city in space.
This aesthetic becomes baked into the Star Trek DNA and as we move backwards (I do NOT mean that pejoratively) into the spaces where TOS lived in there starts to be a pushback against this Spartan outlook where even having to take into account the economy of space on such a vessel warrants reconsideration in certain sectors of both production and fandom.
That's my take on it.
I remember an interview with Shatner shortly before TMP premiered where he talked about how spacious his new quarters were compared to TOS. Funny to see how small even those are compared to Picard's and certainly to Pike's.