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Posts Tagged ‘open floor planning’

The Ups and Downs of Open Floor Plans

Friday, August 17th, 2018

Fine Furniture Design Summer Home Bed Bench can be used as a visual space divider.

The open floor plan is a pretty new concept and it is becoming more popular by the day. It would seem like every home improvement show on the planet is going for this floor layout lately. So why is the open floor plan so hot nowadays?

You really can’t blame homeowners and designers from choosing this layout. This is a fad that seems to be going to the classic status. An open floor plan allows more natural light to flow into the space and it even makes small rooms appear bigger. While there seem to be only advantages to this kind of layout, there are, of course, still some disadvantages, too.

Here are the advantages of open floor plans –

Optimized Multi-tasking

Open floor layout is a wonderful idea for parents with small children. It’s because the mom can now prepare food while supervising her kids who are playing right across her. Parents can now safely finish their work deadlines, too, as they are also multi-tasking and checking on their little ones who are not far from them, playing or doing their own homework.

Optimum Lighting

Natural light would also freely flow. With this, the inhabitants will feel a renewed kind of optimism as the room appears brighter and livelier. Open floor plan allows the maximum allowable light to flow freely inside your home.

As soon as the big walls are toppled down, the sunlight can now shine freely into the living room, kitchen, and just about any section that you would want to appear brighter. Say hello to savings on your electric bills.

Bigger-Looking Room

Ask every homeowner – especially the ladies – and what is the most common thing that they can comment with their home? Studies show that most homeowners believe they have a small kitchen.

One convenient way to add space or at the very least, the illusion of space, is to open up the walls and go ahead and embrace an open floor layout. Keep in mind that the most successful open space plans are able to achieve airiness and spaciousness.

Living rooms tend to appear bigger because of vaulted or the two-storey ceilings.

The Uttermost Lamps and Lighting Ordino Modern Nickel Floor Lamp is an awesome accent piece to an open space layout.

A Bigger Entertainment Space

If you’re the homeowner type who loves to socialize and to gather people during the holidays, then an open floor layout is the best layout for you. It’s because the closed layout gives a sense of separation and compactness as opposed to the airiness that the other layout offers.

Just imagine having a bigger entertainment space now that the guests can see your joined dining area and kitchen. And just think of the next Thanksgiving dinner where everyone would no longer have to be cramped in one area.

There is also a downside to an open space layout and here are some of them –

The Possibility of an Unclean Kitchen

Cooking is a messy process since this is a workspace where meals are prepared. In an open space layout, the kitchen fuses with other parts of your home so, as you can see, there won’t be any place to hide. The messes will be seen by everyone and, yes, including your guests. And this is just the look. How about when we begin to discuss the odors that come with cooking?

No Quiet Moments

With very few walls, you can expect that noise will travel uninterrupted. This means, when the rest of the family is watching their favorite show on TV and you want to read, well, you do get the picture. This is also true when you are having separate lively activities on one given day, say, you would want to watch the football but the girls are also having a sleepover.

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Breathing Space: Why the Open Floor Plan Works

Friday, September 9th, 2016

The 1586-50001-BLK3 Lucky Clover Accent Table is both sleek and modern which makes it the best side table for a living room with open-space concept.

The 1586-50001-BLK3 Lucky Clover Accent Table is both sleek and modern which makes it the best side table for a living room with open-space concept.

Many contemporary and modern homes now use the open floor plan. This is a style that both architects and clients make as a team. Because of the series of benefits and advantages, more and more homeowners are giving in to more breathing space.

Lots of Open Space

One of the major advantages of using an open floor plan in your home is that you get to have wide, wide space. Read some of the interior design magazines and you would often see a living room-kitchen fusion using the open space layout. This kind of layout is more inviting than having two separate rooms. Both rooms would feel more spacious since there are no evident walls to keep them apart.

Lots of Natural Light

As the walls are removed, you are practically removing barriers for light. Let the natural light flow in through the windows. More sunlight means having the whole room look and feel brighter.

This is another reason why open space layouts are a great choice for houses with fewer or smaller windows. This is also the best layout for rooms that have a darker décor.

Lots of Movement

Open floor plan also means that you can have more freedom of movement. You will appreciate this more if you begin to move your furniture around. Since there are no walls or tight spaces, you can move more freely, hence, renovation is a breeze.

Lots of Action

Open space plans also offer more room for entertainment. This is great for people who love to organize social gatherings. This is perfect for those moments when you invite guests over or if you simply want them to stay for dinner. You can have the dining room and the kitchen at adjacent areas so that you can still cook while the guests are having fun.

If you love hosting huge social gatherings, then this layout is, once again, to your advantage. You don’t just offer a larger space to your guests, you also provide an airier atmosphere as there are no walls and doors that could restrict everyone’s access to the dining room and the kitchen. This only means that you don’t have to seat everyone inside one space.

Do you have guests in wheelchairs? Then the open floor layout means they won’t have to worry about doors, stairs and walls which separate what are supposed to be the rooms. The handicapped won’t have to worry about opening doors, turning around or stopping as they can now move more easily.

Since open space layout also means the removal of walls, then you have less space where you could hang your artwork. Since this is so, you just have to assess which pieces need to be displayed and where you could hang them. On the other hand, with a bigger space, you should be able to hang bigger pieces.

More Safety

Since the kitchen is often open to the dining room or the living room, you get to see what is happening to your family even while you are busy cooking. This will make monitoring your kids much easier since you get to see them playing while you are working.

FFDM Brentwood Collection: The furniture pieces, accents, window treatments and flooring all come from the same hue family which makes this a room full of breathing space.

FFDM Brentwood Collection: The furniture pieces, accents, window treatments and flooring all come from the same hue family which makes this a room full of breathing space.

Less Mess

Open floor plan shows the entire home in one glance. This means that it is much easier to clean since you can pretty much see clutter once it’s obviously on the floor or on the walls. Just make sure that everything is clean and tidy, though, since dirt and clutter can also be easier to see.

With less square footage come techniques that should be used to make the area appear bigger. The open space plan is one such technique.

 

 

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Serenity in an Open Floor Plan

Friday, April 29th, 2016

 

 

FFDM’S Summer Home Collection is featured in this corner of a home. Foamed furniture such as the chair here is effective in controlling the overflow of sound.

FFDM’S Summer Home Collection is featured in this corner of a home. Foamed furniture such as the chair here is effective in controlling the overflow of sound.

The open floor plan concept in offices came into existence in the 1960s. Since then, hundreds and thousands of companies all over the world, embraced this concept. Some believe this concept is a source of stress, noise and nuisance. If you look at this floor layout, though, you would immediately begin to see the benefits that it offers.

The open floor plan fosters collaboration among employees. This used to be imposed among workers which made it one of the most used layouts in the world today.

In France, alone, individual cubicles exist as a minority. About 34% of employees still work in partitioned workstations according to a 2015 study.

The early 20th century showed that the open offices flourished. Frank Lloyd and the likes of him perceived the partitioned office as a facist, totalitarian trend. Because of this perception, more flexible plans allowed employees to be free from the confines of small work areas.

Right after World War II, the development of the tertiary sectors was accompanied by a new perception on the workplace. The idea of an open workspace originated in the 50s in Germany. Eberhard and Wolfgang Schnelle came up with the idea of an office landscape where partitions are no longer a necessity.

The work areas were decorated with green plants fostering open communication among the workers. By 1964, Herman Miller, an American company, came up with Action Office Series 1. These were modular offices that were created with panels and various workspace heights. These easily adapted to the workers’ various activities. It was observed that their interactions became more regular and their movements, more fluid.

It was in 1968, though, that Robert Probst came up with the cubicle which is an office space with partitions that can be removed.

The Ultimate Family Design

The open floor plan can be the best kind of family or entertainment space but if you bring in the kids and pets to the picture, you would end up with discord.

This is why there is a need to understand your tolerance level if you are choosing to employ the open space layout in your home. You might have started with how you will use the space on hand but you might have forgotten about the possible noise that could come from family members, pets and appliances. This is especially true if the room features audiovisual components.

Always think of sound as something that is liquid. Water will always look for a place to flow to so it can seep through spaces and cracks.

This is also true with sound. You need to plan for an escape route for any kind of noise.

Consider also the shape of the room. Surfaces made of stone, metal or concrete tend to bounce sound at a louder level.

If you want a modern, clean, no-curtain room, then see if you can install rugs that would deaden the sound. Know how to control the noise by lowering the ceiling, having the columns in a room wrapped in wood, or replicating this kind of ceiling along the rooms.

Should noise become an issue, then it is best to break up the rooms by creating doorways in between the living areas. There is no other way to contain the sound without disturbing the flow.

Interior designers know that fabrics can be used to muffle sound. Empty rooms are noisy but once you bring in the furnishings, draperies, especially the carpets, you would soon notice that the room has become a lot quieter.

Use same color on your walls and draperies. Add texture as well as interest without totally closing off the other rooms. Make good use of soft surfaces like upholstered pillows and chairs to manage the sound.

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