Archive for the 'Housing – General' Category

Making Your Home Work Harder – Case Study

The new ‘Decorate & Improve Your Home’ magazine is now in the shops (€3.50 / £3.25) and in this issue I’m tackling some of the most common problems in small homes by helping a young Dublin couple re-organise the space in their cramped and dark 2-storey terraced house to create a new dining kitchen, maximise natural light and increase storage – all on a small budget and without extending.

In these difficult times, we want to make sure the money we spend on our homes will add real value. Grainne & Michael need to get better use out of the space they have but with limited options and no room to extend, the balance between cost and value is going to be tricky to achieve.

Also featured in this issue:

  • George Clarke of Channel 4′s ‘The Home Show’ & new series, ‘Restoration Man’, answers some common home improvement questions;
  • Niall Browne of Browne Architects reviews current costs for hiring tradesmen and builders in Ireland;
  • A Guide to Installing Solar Panels to reduce water and space heating costs;
  • Making Budget Home Improvements – under 1k, 5k & 10k,

plus £1000 worth of reader giveaways and lots more!

If you have a space problem in your home and would like my help to find a solution that works for you, call me or drop me a line to book a 2 Hour Home Design Consultation – see right for contact details. Or if you know someone who could use some help in creating their dream home, we now offer gift vouchers – the perfect birthday, anniversary, wedding or house-warming gift.

Alternatively, if you’d like to be featured in a future issue of the magazine, we require the following info:

  • photos of your house – an external shot of the front & internal shots of the problem areas;
  • a floor plan, if you have one – even a rough sketch will do!
  • a description of your home, highlighting the problems you’re experiencing.

Send these to anthea@decorateireland.ie, with ‘Property Potential Feature’ in the Subject line. Decorate & Improve Your Home is a Quarterly magazine and we can only feature one home potential project per issue, so if you aren’t selected initially, please keep trying!

If you enjoyed this post, you may also be interested in:

The Hidden Potential in Your Home

It’s Not About Looks: Good Design Works

Putting the Home into a Home Office

Did you find this article useful? Do you have any any pet peeves about housing? Please leave a comment with your thoughts on this subject or any other home improvement / design issues you’d like to know more about.

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Putting the ‘Home’ into a Home Office

living:room - home office

In these days of mobile working, flexible hours and reducing overheads, more and more people are based from home at least part of their working week. I’m lucky enough to have a whole room for home working and this week was delighted to open the door to living:room’s home office to UK interiors blogger, Will Taylor for his regular Office Inspiration feature on Bright Bazaar.

To me it’s very important the work side of things doesn’t take over and that my house still looks like a home, as I discussed with Will – it’s also great to be able to close the door at the end of the day, switch off and enjoy my home.

But not everyone has the luxury of being able to dedicate an entire room to this purpose and part of living:room‘s philosophy is to make space work harder by doubling up on complementary uses wherever possible. By ‘complementary’, I mean those that can co-exist side by side without one interfering with one another – so a home office in the living room where other members of the family may want to watch TV etc., is probably not ideal! Here are some things to consider when setting up a home office and some ideas on how to integrate it seamlessly into your home.

Traditional style home office armoire (Pottery Barn - US)

Location

The increase in the number of people working from home is largely a result of new technology, so most existing homes are not designed to include an office or work space. It may not be about choosing a location so much as squeezing it in wherever you can!

If space is an issue then look for ‘natural’ locations within your home – space under the stairs, an unused cupboard, a wall recess etc. These leftover spaces could be the perfect location to either locate a piece of furniture containing all the office essentials (see image above) or to have something built in to suit your needs. If you have a spare bedroom, then look at building the office into the room’s wardrobe space or cupboards (as designer, Karin Draaijer’s home office, below) – this way it can be closed over at the end of the day, without affecting the use of the room. Just remember to keep some of that storage space for the clothes!

Home Office by Karin Draaijer

Other possible locations might be in a kitchen, integrated into workbench storage or a full-height cupboard; a storage wall in a wide hallway; a large landing at the top of a flight of stairs or a converted roof space, where it may be possible to bring natural light in by means of a roof-light.

Wherever you choose, it’s important that the space be comfortable – well-lit, no draughts or distractions and enough space for your needs, otherwise you won’t use it and could be wasting your money.

If your business is based from home full-time, then good natural light is non-negotiable – it is easier on the eyes, reduces the need for & expense of artificial lighting and, if you’re working on a computer, it’s important to able to rest and adjust your eyes regularly by changing your focus to something located at a distance.

I really like the way Bates Masi Architects created this built-in bench in a bedroom of the Noyak Creek House (click image below for more), as it could easily do double duty as both a dressing table and a low-key work space – with its drawer storage and fantastic natural light and views. This solution will work best in North-facing rooms where you won’t be blinded by sunlight and glare – on those few days a year we see the sun in Ireland!

Noyak Creek House - Bates Masi Architects

Noyak Creek House - Bates Masi Architects

Size

Both size and location will depend on the type of work you do and whether your home office is required for full-time, part-time or occasional working. There are some great cost-effective options designed for occasional use and don’t take up much space – here’s one of my favourites from IKEA:

Slimline Computer workstation by IKEA

Or for a more traditional writing desk-style alternative take a look at the ALVE bureau & cupboard, also by IKEA.

Furniture

I have a horror of the pale wood veneer or glass / metal type office furniture that many retailers provide for home use – they rarely reflect the design choices we make for our homes and end up looking out of place. There is no reason why a home office should look like a corporate one – why not think of it instead as an opportunity to reflect who you are and the values of your business? It can still be a professional space but one that works for you, your business and your home. The example below, by Craig Spencer Design, makes excellent use of a left-over space in a hallway and by using a limited colour palette – black and white, with red detail in the picture – ties in with the look and feel of the rest of the house.

My tip would be to add folding doors, even if only from bench-height upward, to ‘close’ the office at the end of the day – open shelves can look cluttered and untidy and having doors will take care of that, until you’re ready to tackle the housework!

Built-in Home Office - Craig Spencer Design

Built-in Home Office - Craig Spencer Design

Storage

Most businesses require file storage of some kind, so think about those needs as well as the work-station itself. Again, this doesn’t need to be a traditional filing cabinet – look for opportunities to integrate storage in a discreet way by using existing shelving or storage boxes in colours that match the existing decor. In the living:room home office, I’ve combined open and closed storage, where homely items like books and knick-nacks are on display and the more officey items hidden away. If a filing cabinet is the way you want to go, think about locating it in a cupboard or building it into the work station, so its office credentials don’t dominate the look of the room.

One of the cleverest uses of a small space, I’ve come across is the Finger Apartment in New York by Noroof Architects – I love this ‘invisible’ surface that folds down from the wall creating a table or desk and revealing lots of storage space behind. It’s a great example of how to get double value from a room and could easily be adapted to create that ideal, low-profile workspace at home.

Finger Apartment - Table in concealed position

Finger Apartment - Table in open position

Spot the difference? Genius.

For more ideas, check out the Office Inspiration posts on Bright Bazaar. Will has been blogging since early 2009 and is also a freelance writer for various interiors web-sites and national newspapers. His passion for interiors grew out of working for Habitat as a student journalist and he is now working for US home and lifestyle store, Anthropologie, as they expand into Europe, where he puts all his social media savvy into translating the in-store experience to the on-line world.

If you found this article useful, you may also be interested in:

The Elephant in the Room: Spaced Out

The Hidden Potential in Your Home

It’s Not About Looks – Good Design Works

Do you have any any pet peeves about housing or home design? Please leave a comment with your thoughts on this subject or any other home improvement or design issues you’d like to see featured.

Looking for Home Design Inspiration?

Looking for Home Design Inspiration?

Well, 2010 is off to a rollicking start here at Chez living:room! We’re in the latest issue of Munster Interiors – their regular ‘Blog Watch’ feature, written by the lovely Lorna Sixsmith of Garrendenny Lane Interiors, highlights the on-line movers, shakers and dreamers of dreams in the world of home design. Needless to say, we are honoured and privileged to have made the cut!

Featured this month, along with yours truly, is one of living:room’s fave on-line home boutiques, Mabel & Violet, which you may have seen recently in House & Home‘s Irish Hot 100 and if not – where have you been? Written by M&V owner, Paula Asple, the blog covers a miscellany of home design, vintage, furnishing and lifestyle topics, including her own home renovation projects.

Of the ‘Blog Watch’ picks, I was delighted to discover ‘Nestled In‘ for the very first time – a Finnish interior blog featuring twenty-somethings Katja & Minna and their home renovation along with DIY projects and interior, art and design faves. Having visited Helsinki many years back, I’m a sucker for Scandinavian design – and not just the stuff that comes in a flat pack – so this blog is destined to become one of my regular reads!

And, of course,  Lorna knows a thing or two about blogging… In addition to scribing for Munster Interiors, managing her interior design business and on-line shop, being a mother-of-two and mucking in on the hubbie’s dairy farm (phew!) – she also finds time to write a regular interior design blog over at Garrendenny Lane. For specific decor or furnishing quandries, Lorna does a Friday Fix-It post where she answers specific reader queries like choosing light fittings for a double-height hallway or decorating a girl’s bedroom – if you’re in need of help, just drop her a line.

If you found this article of interest, you may also like:

The Hidden Potential in your Home

It’s Not About Looks – Good Design Works

Dublin Open House: A-Rated House by FKL Architects (and 5 Ideas to Steal…)

Do you have any any pet peeves about housing or home design? Please leave a comment with your thoughts on this subject or any other home improvement or design issues you’d like to see featured.

Skating around Home Design Problems

People tend to call on me when they have a problem with their homes – a long-standing issue they can no longer ignore or something new created by a change in circumstance. Either way, it’s just human nature to have a problem with problems. Often we don’t even want to acknowledge they exist for fear of discovering bigger, uglier problems lurking beneath!

Me – I love problems. Once you clearly identify a problem, you’re already half way to solving it. The key usually lies in understanding the problem itself, and applying a little bit of creative thinking to unlock it.

I got to thinking about this after watching ‘Dancing on Ice – The Story of Bolero’ on TV last night – a documentary about Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean’s record-breaking routine at the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo. As a teenager, I watched them skate to victory and remember both the beauty of the ‘Bolero’ routine and the acclaim that followed when they were awarded full marks by each of the 12 judges – a feat that hasn’t been matched before or since.

But what I found intriguing, watching the documentary, was how this extraordinary performance essentially started out as a problem. The original ‘Bolero’ piece by Ravel is 17 mins long – the competition rules only allow only 4 minutes skating time. Torvill & Dean hired a composer and worked with him to condense the key elements of the piece to meet the competition requirements. After working on the piece for 3 days, they managed to reduce it to 4 mins… and 28 seconds. No matter how hard they tried they couldn’t make it any shorter without losing the things they loved about the music.

Many might have given up at this point, picked another piece and worked with that instead but Torvill & Dean knew this was the right music for them and were determined to use it. When they examined the competition rules, they discovered the ’4 minute’ clock on the routine only started when their skates made contact with the ice – and so they designed a routine where they didn’t make contact with the ice for the first 28 seconds! What they created as a result was iconic, ground-breaking and, of course, Olympic Gold.

Had they been able to condense Bolero into 4 minutes exactly, would they have come up with as memorable an opening? The need to solve the problem of the extra 28 seconds made them look at their work from a completely different angle. It was creative thinking at its most elegant – a response that not only solves the initial problem but enhances and improves the whole, taking it to new heights.

I know I’ve struck gold when a client tells me I’ve presented them with an idea for their home they’d never have thought of themselves and, instead of seeing a problem, they start to get excited about new possibilities. Next time you’re feeling dissatisfied about your home, remember this – as troublesome and annoying as a problem like lack of space or natural light may be, it also brings the opportunity to create something new and better. All it takes is a little creative thinking. Now isn’t that music to your ears?

If you found this article of interest, you may also like:

It’s Not About Looks – Good Design Works

Elephant in the Room 1: The Bad Extension

Elephant in the Room 2: Spaced Out

Do you have any any pet peeves about housing or home design? Please leave a comment with your thoughts on this subject or any other home improvement or design issues you’d like to see featured.

Dublin Open House: A-Rated House by FKL Architects

As part of the Dublin Open House event in October, I took a look around FKL Architects‘ ‘A-Rated House’ in Rathmines, Dublin – a concrete built 2-storey home, designed to respond the physical and planning restrictions of a small North-facing mews plot in the South Dublin inner city suburbs.

The 3-bed house was designed for Michelle Fagan and Gary Lysaght, both partners at FKL Architects, and their family, and besides setting a new aesthetic brief for environmentally responsible design, it also offers some interesting spatial ideas to meet the challenges of modern family living.

5 Ideas to take from FKL’s A-Rated House (after pics)

FKL A-Rated House

Front View from Laneway

Entry and Stair

FKL A-Rated House

View from kitchen toward garden

FKL A-Rated House

Double-height 'Slot' thru House

FKL A-Rated House

Stair & Rooflights

FKL A-Rated House

Upstairs Living Room

FKL A-Rated House

Balustrade around double-height 'Slot'

FKL A-Rated House

View from Living Room toward Landing 'Bridge'

FKL A-Rated House

Master Bedroom

FKL A-Rated House

Rooflight in Bathroom

FKL A-Rated House

Rear View from Garden

5 Ideas to take from FKL’s A-Rated House:

Green Credentials:

Eco- friendly concrete, external insulation, a green living roof to replace the building footprint, solar panels, heat recovery, vegetable plot and a lively suburban location, eliminating the need for a car as fundamental ingredient in daily life – all go to show creating a beautiful, modern home doesn’t have to mean sacrificing environmental credibility.

It’s Not White:

For anyone who’s ever tried to co-exist in a minimal white interior with grubby-pawed toddlers or to impress aesthetic appreciation upon crayon-toting kids, the passing of this particular trend must surely meet with a chorus of Hallelujiahs! The A-Rated House’s concrete interior creates a neutral background that’s easy on the eye, with timber cabinets and wall panels providing an added visual warmth.

Upstairs, Downstairs

The most interesting idea at work in the A-Rated House is the central double-height slot that divides the building in two – bridged only where the stair lands at first floor level – creating a visual and spatial link between upstairs and downstairs. Wherever you are in the house, you are aware of this relationship to everything else – a truly open plan type of living. The advantage is that everything in the house feels connected – the disadvantage could be a lack of privacy.

Light Matters

One of the biggest challenges of building in this location is the orientation – the house faces South onto a narrow laneway, with the living rooms and garden facing North. Light from the front of the house, and from strategically placed rooflights, travels down through the central double-height space bringing sunlight into the rear of the house – the family can enjoy the tracking of the sun’s path through the course of the day across this space. Dividing the living space between ground and first floor levels  also maximises natural light and views at the upper level.

Flexible Space

At the rear of the house at ground floor level, addressing the garden and only partially open to the kitchen dining space, is a family living room or snug. This space has a doorway linking it to a discrete ‘service’ corridor giving access to a Utility and storage area, the integral garage and also downstairs WC / Shower room. The snug can therefore double as guest accommodation complete with en-suite bathroom, when required.

Final Thoughts

My only concern about the open plan nature of the house would be a lack of privacy that could become an issue as the family grows older. When puberty and the woe-ridden adolescent years hit, a place of retreat becomes essential to the sanity of teenagers and parents alike.

The saving grace here comes in the unlikely form of the City Fathers and their insistence that off-street parking be provided as an integral part of the design, despite the owners not owning or wishing to own a car! The ‘garage’ (although this seems too mean a word for the clean, bright space created for this purpose), already separated from the main body of the house by the service zone, provides the possibility of sanctuary – the final component  to make this a truly sustainable and flexible home.

If you found this article of interest, you may also like:

Dublin Open House: House 1 | House 2 by TAKA Architects (and 5 Ideas to Steal…)

The Hidden Potential in your Home

It’s Not About Looks – Good Design Works

Do you have any any pet peeves about housing or home design? Please leave a comment with your thoughts on this subject or any other home improvement or design issues you’d like to see featured.

Dublin Open House (or D’OH…)

homer_simpson_doh_02_feature

A few weeks ago, I heartily urged you all to attend the Dublin Open House event and take a look at some of the best examples of new residential design in this fine City. So hearty were my urgings that I almost couldn’t get a spot on the house tours myself. A couple of cancellations later, and some fancy footwork by the lovely Dympna and Annette at the Open House booking office, and I was back on track.

On Sunday afternoon with a skip in my step, I grabbed my camera and headed across the river into deepest, darkest Southside Dublin.

Imagine my delight when wandering inside FKL’s ‘A-Rated House’ to catch the light falling across the staircase just so! To capture the dapple of the lengthening shadows on Taka’s ‘House 1 & House 2′ modelled brick facade!

So giddy was I in anticipation of architectural splendour, so ardent in my pursuit of delectable design, the fact that I had removed the memory card from my camera to download the latest client house pics earlier that week went entirely un-noticed. D’oh, indeed.

But no matter, I hear you cry (for my tale of woe has moved you to your wobbly core) – modern digital cameras have built in memory that stores your pics without need of a separate memory card!

Bless your tender hearts. After all, how could you know? About that fateful day, months before – an over-stuffed bag, the USB cable, the pierced foil of a bumper size pot of yoghurt.

Probiotic.

Fear not – there is, I am glad to say, a happy ending. Even as I type, Pixmania’s trusty steeds are hurtling a new USB camera cable to living:room’s door and those Open House pictorial masterpieces will shortly be available for your viewing pleasure.

Watch this space.

What Does Home Mean to You?

Denny_Home Isdenny_teacup

Is it reading the newspaper and the smell of freshly brewed coffee on a Sunday morning?

Is it crisp winter evenings in front of a roaring fire, with the family at Christmas?

Or is it just the place where you kick of your shoes at the end of a long day and escape from the world?

Denny is taking to the road in Ireland’s first ever search to find out what home means to you…

Their ‘Home on Wheels’ and specially created ‘Pop-Up Homes’ will be appearing around the country on main retail streets, where you can call in, have a cuppa and a chat with the resident ‘mammy and son’ and for every person who shares their thoughts on home, Denny is donating €1/85p to the Simon Community, who provide care, accommodation and support to almost 10,000 people every year throughout Ireland, who experience – or are at risk of homelessness.  You can comment on-line, by text or in person by uploading photos, videos or comments to www.homeis.ie, texting 51444 (ROI) or 81515 (NI) or by popping into one of Denny’s homes.

Tricia Burke of Denny says: “We realise the importance of home and how something small can really make people feel “at home” – your favourite cup, a special spot on the sofa or even a song that reminds you of home.”

And we’re delighted to say living:room will be there too! I’ll be dropping in to the Denny ‘Pop-Up Home’ at various locations over the coming weeks to offer advice and answer questions, helping you deal with home design dilemmas and fall back in love with your home!

First stop is Galway City tomorrow afternoon, so if you have any questions about renovating, extending, planning permission or just making the space in your home work harder, then come on down to the ‘Pop Up Home’  at 2-3 Dominick Street from 3 – 4.30pm for a chat. The Home Is.. team will be in Galway until Sunday when they will move on to Waterford followed by Letterkenny, Belfast and Dublin in the coming weeks.

To make a comment, keep up-to-date with the ‘Home on Wheels’ and ‘Pop Up Home’ locations and dates or even volunteer your home to be filmed as part of the campaign, go to the Home Is.. web-site, check out the Facebook page or follow Denny Home Is on Twitter.

Please do leave a comment and support this very good cause.

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The DIY Energy Efficient Home

The DIY Energy Efficient Home

With Summer fast becoming a dim and distant memory, now is the time to prepare your home for keeping warm this Winter. We all know that saving energy is a good thing – an energy efficient home means lower bills, as well as reducing pressure on non-sustainable fuel sources like gas and oil – it can even add value to your home. But where do you start? Which changes will make a real difference and which just burn a hole in your pocket?

This time last year I attended ‘Basic Domestic Energy Auditing’  – a day long workshop by Andy Wilson of The Sustainability Institute, organised by Cultivate in Dublin. At that time, there was a lot of  emphasis on the new Building Energy Rating certificates, which were introduced at the beginning of this year, and the necessity to upgrade existing houses to improve energy efficiency. Now, Cultivate, in their new premises on St Andrew’s Lane are running the workshop again on Sunday 18th October.

The aim of the workshop is to help homeowners:

  • Understand energy use in buildings
  • Learn methods and techniques for reducing energy use in the home & workplace;
  • Examine renewable energy options
  • Develop energy literacy and numeracy.

The Energy Efficient Home

In principle, it seems straightforward enough – the more energy efficient the construction of a house, the less money we need to spend heating it. But what makes a house energy efficient?

Orientation

The position of a house in relation to the sun, how sheltered it is and how much sunlight, rain or wind it is exposed to can impact on its energy use. For example, a house where the main living spaces are orientated toward the South will benefit from the heat of the sun during the day, reducing the need for heating. Obviously, this is more useful as a design tool when planning a new house and, though it is possible to improve orientation when extending, for example, you may have to resign yourself to the direction your house is facing!

Insulation

Building insulation into the external walls, roofs and ground floor of a home keeps cold air out and warm air in, reducing need for additional heating, or eliminating it entirely, as in the principles of PassivHaus design. Although most older houses were not built with insulation, this can usually be retro-fitted and there are many options and products available.

Air Tightness

Thoughtful design, attention to detail and good workmanship can eliminate the typical gaps that occur in the construction of a building and prevent heat from escaping. Many of these will be hidden within walls or behind finishes so you may not even know about them or the amount of heat they siphon from your home. Smoke tests can help identify these gaps but contractors and builders need to be more aware of the problems created by lack of air tightness, as this can be difficult to resolve in an existing house.

Appliance & Energy Source

Are you relying on a fuel that is under threat from diminishing resources and potential price hikes – eg. oil and gas – or one that is renewable and sustainable – eg. solar power or wood pellets? Are your appliances and heating system designed use these fuels efficiently? Heating systems and appliances can usually be updated, but can be costly.

The Workshop

I was interested in attending ‘Basic Domestic Energy Auditing’ as much as a period home owner trying to get to grips with improving energy efficiency, without eliminating all those period features that I fell in love with in the first place, as from an architectural point of view. I understand how to build a new home in an energy efficient way but refurbishing older buildings is a trickier process.

The workshop isn’t a BER assessor course but rather a practical hands on approach to help individual homeowners get to grips with Building Regulation standards, how their homes use and lose energy and how much that could be costing them. And it all counts – even the smallest changes can reap rewards.

10 Energy Efficient Fixes for Your Home

As a starting point, I found Andy’s recommendations for DIY jobs to improve the energy performance of an existing house very useful. They boil down to 2 very simple rules – keep heat in, keep draughts out – and here they are in ascending order of ease and cost:

  1. Add lagging around the hot water cylinder and all hot water pipes;
  2. Draught proof doors and windows – you can buy proprietary metal strips with a brush edge at most DIY stores;
  3. Hang heavy curtains to keep cold air out and warm air in (think about using these at external doors as well as windows);
  4. Seal any gaps in the external walls of the house – these can occur round doors, windows, pipework, vents etc. – again proprietary sealants are available at DIY stores, just ask for advice on the best type for the location you have in mind;
  5. Install an insulated door to your attic or to crawl spaces in the eaves, if you have a converted roof space;
  6. Insulate (or re-insulate) the loft and put a floor down over it to protect the insulation. Note: insulation should be laid in two layers – the first between the timber joists and the second laid cross-ways over the first layer to avoid gaps that cold air could pass through;
  7. Replace open fires with a solid fuel burning stove to reduce draughts and prevent valuable heat escaping up the chimney, rather than into the room;
  8. Upgrade windows;
  9. Dry-line and insulate the internal walls;
  10. Replace the boiler / central heating sytem.

But this is just the tip of the iceberg – Andy discusses how to analyse your own home to identify problems and then advises how best to solve them. Throughout the day we were encouraged to ask questions about how each topic related to our own homes, so the information provided is very much tailored to suit individual needs – I found it a very useful and informative day and would highly recommend it to anyone wanting to improve both their understanding of energy efficiency and their homes.

The workshop runs from 10am – 5pm on Sunday 18th October, and costs €120 with a discount for Cultivate & EASCA members. For more info, take a look at the Cultivate web-site or call 01 674 5773.

If you enjoyed this post, you may also be interested in:

Is Your Home BER Ready?

BER Update – Grant Assistance

Did you find this article useful? Do you have any any pet peeves about housing or home design? Please leave a comment with your thoughts on this subject or any other home improvement or design issues you’d like to know more about.

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The Hidden Potential in Your Home

The latest ‘Decorate & Improve Your Home’ magazine will be hitting the news-stands shortly and, for those of you who missed the last issue, here’s another chance to catch yours truly helping a Skerries couple tackle the space and natural light problems in their 4 bedroom semi-detached home on a tiny budget.

Click on the top right icon to view in full screen mode:

If you would like to discover the potential in your home and be featured in a future issue of the magazine, we require the following info:

  • photos of your house – an external shot of the front & internal shots of the problem areas;
  • a floor plan, if you have one – even a rough sketch will do!
  • a description of your home, highlighting the problems you’re experiencing.

Send these to info@livingroom.ie or anthea@decorateireland.ie, with ‘Property Potential Feature’ in the Subject line. Decorate & Improve Your Home is a Quarterly magazine and we can only feature one home potential project per issue, so if you aren’t selected initially, please keep trying!

If you enjoyed this post, you may also be interested in:

The Elephant in the Room 1: The Bad Extension

The Elephant in the Room 2: Spaced Out

It’s Not About Looks: Good Design Works

Did you find this article useful? Do you have any any pet peeves about housing? Please leave a comment with your thoughts on this subject or any other home improvement or design issues you’d like to know more about.

Add to Technorati Favorites

It’s Not About Looks: Good Design Works

Peacock

BBC2 ran a series called ‘Home for Life’ recently, where brand consultants, Jamie Anley and Phil Nutley, helped homeowners move past the bland Magnolia School of Interior Decor and put a personal stamp on their homes. Watching the first of these programmes, where a couple struggled with the living room of a fairly typical home, I was struck by another problem aspect of modern housing – are we more concerned with how our homes look than how they work?

Do we even think about how our homes work? We pick one that seems to have the right amount of space for the things we want to do – eat, sleep, play etc., then decide which rooms will do what and put Stuff in – easy!

On the face of it, yes, it sounds easy but where we put Stuff and, indeed, the size, shape and location of the rooms have a bigger  impact on how we use them than we might realise.

Maybe you never got further than ‘Will I be able to fit everything in?’ or ‘Can I see the TV from there?’ But when it comes to planning a room, a number of factors play a part:

  • What do you want to use the room for?
  • Who will be using it?
  • How often is it used?
  • How much space do you really have?
  • Can you move around easily?
  • Is it pleasant to be in?
  • Are there any safety issues?
  • Is there enough natural light and ventilation?

And there are less tangible forces at work too. Think about your living room or bedroom design – where is the sofa or bed? In a typical home, they’re most likely positioned against the wall with the most free space and there is a simple psychological reason for this – we feel safe when we have something solid like a wall behind us.

I see this all the time in my local cafe where half the tables are arranged along the side walls and half are located in the middle of the room. I’ve never yet seen a customer pick a table in the middle of the room, if a table along the wall was free!

It’s a defensive measure, something that’s hot-wired into our psyche as part of our ‘fight or flight’ instinct – if we can’t see what’s behind us we may be vulnerable from that direction but when we know exactly what’s back there, we can focus our energy elsewhere. It’s particularly true of the places where we want to relax and rest – why do you think our ancestors made their homes in caves?

Ancestors put personal stamp on Home Interior..

Early Ancestors put a personal stamp on their Homes..

The threat of large, toothy predators having somewhat diminished in recent years, this basic instinct nevertheless holds true. At a purely practical level, in a living room design, locating a sofa against a wall means we’re less likely to have the wits scared out of us by someone brushing past unexpectedly while we’re sitting there.

Wall space then is one of the most valuable parts of a room – it dictates how we use it and how flexible it is to change. But, in our homes, there is a lot of competition for this usable space – doors, windows, chimneys, radiators – all of these can restrict how and where we place furniture when planning a room and how useable it is as a result.

The other crucial factor determining how much useful and usable space we have in our homes is movement through and between rooms – circulation. As more and more homes skirt the dividing line between open plan and traditional layouts – by knocking down walls or opening them up to link rooms together – the impact of bad circulation on our homes has increased.

The golden rule with circulation is that it should happen around the main function areas of a room, not through them. Where a circulation route cuts across the activity area, it limits the way that room can be used – more circulation means less usable space.

kitchens_circulation

A Typical Kitchen - Bad Circulation v. Good Circulation

In this example of a Typical Kitchen, both sketches show the various routes that someone might take through the kitchen to the garden at the top of the plan or to a utility room at the side.

On the left, almost every route interferes with the use of the kitchen. Why is this a problem? Well, given that this is where we handle sharp knives, hot pans and kettles of boiling water, the last thing we need is the smaller members of our family careening about in our path.

On the right, a different kitchen design in the same space makes it possible to move through the room without interfering with either the working area of the kitchen or someone sitting at the table. The island unit also allows us to keep an eye on kids playing at the table or chat to friends, instead of working facing away from the room.

What I noticed, watching that first episode of ‘Home for Life’, was that the living room – the room in which the family spent most of their free time – was a perfect storm of unusable space. The drawings below show the approx. floor layout for the house – circulation routes are shown by the dotted lines & blue arrows and the red lines show usable wall space in the living room.

Home for life_before

Floor Plan - Before Makeover

Before the makeover, the living room had virtually no usable wall space, as each wall is interrupted by a window, a chimney, doors etc. The sofa ended up in the only spot available – forming an island in the middle of the room, surrounded by activity on all sides – hardly an ideal spot to relax!

Floor Plan - After Makeover

Floor Plan - After Makeover

After the makeover, the situation is not much better – the redundant chimney has been removed to create some usable wall space but the other problem areas haven’t been tackled. The furniture is now lined up along the one usable wall, like a waiting room, and anyone sitting, watching TV is still likely to be disturbed by others moving about the house.

Now the aim of the programme wasn’t to improve the value or solve design problems but it seemed to me to be a lost opportunity – when carrying out extensive decorative work anyway, it would have been the ideal time to fix the problem and make their home work.

Here’s what I would have done:

Floor Plan - Quick Fix Option

Floor Plan - Quick Fix Option

See the difference?

The Quick Fix blocks up the door from the living room to the dining room and creates a new door from the kitchen instead – a relatively simple job that would certainly have fit within their budget for the makeover. The living room is no longer the centre of a spaghetti junction and instead becomes a destination within the house. Now the family can:

  • Move through the house without having to cross the living room,
  • Sit comfortably or have a conversation without being disturbed and -
  • See what’s going on and who’s moving about instead of sitting with their backs to the rest of the house.

With a bigger budget, they could have gone one step further:

Floor Plan - Max. Value Option

Floor Plan - Max. Value Option

The Maximum Value option takes the partition wall between the kitchen and dining room away altogether (subject to a structural survey), creating a large open plan kitchen dining room adjacent to the garden – a requirement that is top of the family home buyers’ wish list. It gives double the value – the family have the use and enjoyment of this space while they live here and it has ready-made appeal to their target market, if they ever decide to move on.

The Quick Fix option could easily be upgraded to the Max. Value option at a later date, as need and funds dictate. And for a Deluxe version, knock the wall between the window & door in the kitchen (this would require structural support) and insert sliding, bi-fold doors to open the whole room up to the garden.

The beauty of all these options is that they don’t require planning permission.*

Try these simple exercises on a floor plan of your home to identify usable wall space & circulation routes – you may be surprised at what you find!

On ‘Home for Life’, the finished house looked lovely and the owners were delighted with the change but the basic problem of how they use their front room remained unresolved. By focusing on how the room looked instead of how it worked, they missed an opportunity to add value to their home and improve their overall quality of life.

I think this is one of the most misunderstood aspects of design:

Good design is how something works, not simply how it looks.

I applaud the ‘Home for Life’ series for encouraging homeowners to think of their homes as places that reflect who they are, not just what they’re worth. As the sketches above illustrate, small changes can reap big rewards and needn’t cost the earth. I firmly believe now, more than ever, it’s important to ensure that the money we spend on our homes improves our experience of them and, in doing so, adds value.

Note: I have no connection to the ‘Home for Life’ programme and these observations are made simply as a viewer of the series.

* These changes could be carried out under Exempt Development in the Republic of Ireland – if carrying out similar work, please check with your local planning authority.

If you enjoyed this post, you may also be interested in:

The Elephant in the Room 1: The Bad Extension

The Elephant in the Room 2: Spaced Out

Is Your Home an iPhone or a Model T Ford?

Did you find this article useful? Do you have any any pet peeves about housing? Please leave a comment with your thoughts on this subject or any other home improvement or design issues you’d like to know more about.

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I'm Angela Carr - a fully qualified Architect with a passion for good housing design - and I believe creating a beautiful, functional home needn't break the bank.

As well as providing design and planning advice here on the blog, I conduct home design consultations and seminars, and also write for Interior & Home Improvement magazines.

If you'd like my help with your home, please drop me a line at the address below - I'd love to hear from you.

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